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..o*-M4*.„ 


•^863 


DATE  DUE 



1 

UNIVERSITY  OF  MASSACHUSETTS 
LIBRARY 


F 

67 

M32 

V.4 

PT.  1 

+ 


v^'*'^ 


u^ 


RECORDS 


OP 


MASSACHUSETTS. 


YOL.  IV. -PART  I. 


1650-1660. 


I 


RECORDS 


OF 


THE    GOVERNOR    AND    COMPANY 


OF    THE 


MASSACHUSETTS    BAY 

IN 

NEW  ENGLAND. 

PRINTED  BY  ORDER  OF  THE  LEGISLATURE. 
EDITED  BY 

NATHANIEL  B.  SHURTLEFF,  M.D., 

MCMBEll    OF  THE    MASSACHUSETTS     HISTORICAL    SOCIETY,    PELLOW    OF  THE    AMERICAN 

ACADEMY    OF    AKT3    AND    SCIEXCF.S,    AND    MEMBER    OP    THE 

AMEIUCAN    ANTIQUAUIAN    SOCIETY. 

YOL.  lY.-PAUT  I. 

1050-1060. 


BOSTON: 
FROM    THE    PRESS    OF    "WILLIAM    WHITE, 

PRINTER  TO  THE  COMMONWEALTH. 

1854. 


LIBRARY 

UNiVFRSiry  Of 

MASSACHU^jUlS 
AMHERST  MASS. 


E  E  M  A  R  K  S . 


^■"^inS  volume,  whose  natural  position  in  the  series  is  next  to  the 
A  second,  is  divided  into  two  parts,  on  account  of  its  large  size.  Each 
part  is  perfect  in  itself,  having  the  names  of  those  who  took  the  free- 
man's oath  printed  separately  at  the  end,  and  also  the  proper  indexes. 
The  original  manuscript  volume  corresponding  Avitli  these  two  parts 
is  known  as  Volume  IV. ;  in  order,  therefore,  that  the  printed  copy 
may  bear  the  same  volume  number,  it  is  designated  as  Volume  IV., 
Parts  I.  and  II. 

Part  I.  embraces  the  period  commenchig  on  the  twent3^-second  of 
May,  1650,  and  terminating  with  a  session  of  the  General  Court  held  on 
the  nineteenth  of  December,  1600. 

Fart  II.  commen(*es  with  the  record  of  the  proceedings  of  the  Gen- 
eral Court  of  Election  held  on  the  twenty-second  of  May,  1661,  and 
ends  with  that  of  the  session  of  March,  1673-4. 

The  Introductory  Remarks  of  a  general  character  which  are  print- 
ed in  connection  with  the  first  and  third  volumes  are  strictly  applicable 
to  this. 

N.  B.  S. 

December,  1854. 


MARKS  AND  CONTRACTIONS. 


A  Dash  '  (or  straight  line)  over  a  letter  indicates  the  omission  of  the  letter 
following  the  one  marked. 

A  Curved  Line  ~  indicates  the  omission  of  one  or  more  letters  next  to  the 
one  marked. 

A  Superior  Letter  indicates  the  omission  of  contiguous  letters,  either  pre- 
ceding or  following  it. 

A  Caret  ^  indicates  an  omission  in  the  original  record. 

A  Cross  X  indicates  a  lost  or  unintelligible  word. 

All  doubtful  words  supplied  by  the  editor  are  included  between  brackets,  [  ] 

Some  redundancies  in  the  original  record  are  printed  in  Italics. 

Some  interlineations,  that  occur  in  the  original  record,  are  put  between 
parallels,  ||    ||. 

Several  characters  have  special  siguificatlous,  namely :  — 


@, —  annum,  amio. 
a,    —  an,  am,  —  curia,  curiam. 
a,    —  matrate,  magistrate, 
t,    —  ber,  —  num^,  number  ;     Eobt, 
Robert. 

c,  —  ci,  tl,  —  accon,  action. 

c(5,  —  tio, — jurlsdiccbn,  jurisdiction. 
S,    —  ere,  cer,  —  a(3s,  acres. 

d,  —  dd,  delivered. 

e,  —  Trer,  Treasurer. 

e,    —  committe,  committee, 
g,    —  gfilal,  general. 
h,    —  chr,  cliarter. 
T,     —  begTg,  beginig,  beginning. 
i,     —  ire,  letter. 

iii,  —  mm,  mn,  —  coiiilttcc,  commit- 
tee. 
m,  —  recoindaciin,  recommendation, 
inl,  —  mer,  —  fonnlly,  formerly. 
i?i,  —  month. 

n,    —  nn,  —  Pen,  Penn  ;  ano,  anno, 
n,    —  Dili,  Domini. 
fi),    —  ner,  —  mann),  manner, 
o,    — on, — montio,  mention. 


o,  —  mo,  month. 

p,  —  par,  por,  —  pt,  part ;   ption,  por- 
tion. 

p,  —  per,  —  pson,  person. 

p,  —  pro,  —  pporcon,  proportion. 

p, — pre,  — psent,  present. 

CI ,  —  q,stion,  question. 

^, —  escp,  esquire. 

r,  —  Apr,  April. 

i,  —  s,  session  ;  sd,  said. 

s,  —  ser,  —  Svauts,  servants. 

?,  —  ter,  —  ncuf,  neuter. 

t,  —  capt,  captain. 

Q,  —  uer,  —  scflal,  scueral. 

fi,  —  abou,  aboue,  above. 

\>,  —  vcr,  —  se9al,  several. 

w, —  wn,  when. 

y-",  the  ;  y"',  them  ;  y",  then  ;  y%  tlieir  ; 
y%  this ;  y',  that. 

5,  —  us,  —  vilibs,  villbus. 

^,  —  es,  ct,  —  statutf^,  statutes. 

{S,  &e,  &c%  —  et  ca-tera. 

vlzj,  —  videlicet,  namely. 

./         —  full  point. 

(ill) 


CONTENTS  OF  VOLUME  IT.  PART  I. 


THE   COLONY   RECORDS,   1650—1660, 1 

MISCELLANEOUS   RECORDS, 457 

FREEMEN   OF   THE   COLONY,    1650—1660, 459 

GENERAL   INDEX, 463 

INDEX  OF  FREEMEN, 515 

(  V) 


THE    COLONY   RECORDS 


1650-1660. 


MASSACHUSETTS    EECORDS. 


THE    EECORDS    OF   THE    COLONY   OF   THE   MASSACHUSETTS 
BAY   IN   NEW   ENGLAND. 

[The  fourth  volume  of  the  Massachusetts  Records  commences  here.  The  original  is  in  the  hand- 
writing of  Secretary  Kawson,  and  embraces  a  period  of  twenty-five  years,  extending  from  the  commence- 
ment of  the  May'  session  in  1650  to  the  end  of  the  session  in  March,  1673-4.  For  convenience,  the 
volume  is  printed  in  two  parts;  and,  as  in  the  preceding  volumes,  the  names  of  the  freemen  are  taken 
from  the  margins,  and  transferred  to  the  end  of  each  part,  where  they  may  be  found  in  chronological 
order.] 

*At  a  Generatl  Court  of  Eleccons,  held  at  Boston,  22"^  of  May, 

1650. 

THOMAS  DUDLEY,  Es^,  was  chosen  Goiiuo',  &  tooke  the  oath  to  that 
place  appertayning. 
John  Endecott,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep'  GoQno%  &  tooke  his  oath. 
Rich  Bellingham,  Es^, 
Increase  Nowell,  Gen?, 
Simon  Bradstreete,  Gent, 
Thomas.  Flint,  Gent, 
W""  Hibbens,  Gen?, 
Samiiell  Simons,  Gent, 
W""  Piuchon,  Gen?, 
Capt  Robert  Bridges, 
Frauncis  Willoiighby,  Gen?, 
Cap?  Thomas  Wiggen, 

Edward  Gibbons,  Gent,  was  chosen  Asistant  and  Majo''  Generall. 
Simon  Bradstreet,  Gen?,  & ' 


>■  were  chosen  Asistants,  &  tooke  their  oathes. 


,  were  chosen  Comission"  for  the  Vnited  Collonies. 
Cap?  W""  Hauthorne,         J 

Richard  Bellingham,  Es^*,  3,  &"1  were  nextly  chosen  Coinission"  to  supply, 

John  Endecott,  Esq^,  4,  J  in  case  of  their  failing. 

Edward  Rawson,  Gen?,  was  then  chosen  Secretary. 

Richard  Russell,  Gen?,  was  chosen  Treasurer. 

VOL.  IV. PART   I.  1 


1G50. 

22  May. 

22  May. 


;  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1650.  The  names  of  the  Depu*^  retourned  from  the  seuerall  townes  to  serve  at 

this  General!  Court  were,  — 

Salem :  Capt  "W""  Hathorn  &  M'  Henry  f  artholmew. 

Charles  Toune :  M'^  Eich  Russell  &  Lef  Frauncis  Norton. 

Dorchester  :  M'  John  Glouer  &  Capt  Humphry  Atherton. 

Boston :  M'^  Anthony  Stoddard  &  M''  Thomas  Marshall. 

Eoxbuiy :  M'  John  Johnson  &  M'  "W""  Parkes. 

"Water  Toune  :  M"'  Rich  Broune  &  M'  Ephrajm  Child. 

Cambridg :  M"^  Edward  Jackson  &  M'  Edward  GofFe. 

Lynne  :  M''  Thomas  Laughton. 

Ipswich :  M"'  Jolin  Whiple  &  M''  W""  Bartholomew. 

Newbery  :  Lef*  W"  Gerish. 

"Weimouth :  Thorn  Dyer. 

Hingham :  M''  Bozoun  Allen  «&  M'  Joshua  Hubbard. 

Concord  :   Cap?  Simon  Willard. 

Dedham  :   Capt  Eleazer  Lusher. 

Salisbury  :  ISI''  Christopher  Batt. 

Hampton :  Jeoffery  Mingay. 

Rowley :  Cap?  Sebastian  Brigham,  M'  Mathew  Boyes. 

Sudbuiy :  M''  Peeter  Noyes,  Ensigne  Edmond  Goodenow. 

Doner :  Lef  John  Baker,  Cap?  W'^  Tyng. 

Brajntree ;  Stephen  Kingsly. 

Glocester:  Hugh  Caulkin. 

Woobourne :  Cap?  Edward  Johnson. 

Wenham :  W"  Eiske. 

Haverill :  INI""  Robt  Cleoments. 

Redding  :  Lef*  Richard  Walker. 

Springfeild  :  M"'  Edward  Holiocke. 

Maiden  :  M'  Joseph  Hills. 

[*2.]  *Wliereas  many  and  great  miscariages  are  committed  by  saylors  by  their 

Debts  made  by  imodcrate  drinking  of  wine,  beere,  and  strong  liquors,  to  the  great  dislionor 

sajlo's  not  re- 

cottable  by  of  God,  and  reproach  of  religion  and  gouefment  heere  established,  which  also 
m' or  owner  of  ofttimes  occasions  much  prejudice  and  dainage  to  the  masters  and  owners  of 
such  vesseli  be  gy^ch  shipps  and  vessells  to  which  they  belong,  their  men  ofttimes  being  ar- 

their  securitje. 

rested  for  debts  so  made  when  their  shipps  or  other  vessells  are  ready  to  sett 
sajle  for  their  voyage ;  for  prevention  whereof,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and 
authoritje  thereof,  that  no  iukeeper,  victualler,  or  other  seller  of  wjnc,  beere, 
or  strong  liquors,  shall,  after  publication  heereof,  arrest,  attach,  or  recouer  by 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY   IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  3 

« 

lawe  any  debt  or  debts  so  made  by  any  sajlor  or  sajlors  aforementioned,  except      1  G  5  0. 
the  master  or  owner  of  such,  shippe  or  vessell  to  whom  such  sajlor  or  sajlors  ^i        ' 

22  May. 

belong  have  given  under  his  hand  to  dischardge  the  same,  any  law,  custome, 
or  vsage  to  the  contrary  in  any  wise  notw*''standing. 

The  Court  finding  great  inconveniencyes  arising  by  that  clause,  in  the  Order  for  the 
order  which  prescribes  the  secretaiy  and  clarkes  duty  and  imployment,  that  Tp„i^at™p"s^ 
appoints  what  is  past  amongst  the  deputjes  should  remajne  with  the  speaker  ^°^^  howses  to 
till  the  whole  Court  shall  meete  together,  or  a  comittee  of  the  Magis''*  and 
Deputjes,  to  consider,  &&,  and  at  the  end  of  the  Court  deliuer  the  same  to  the 
secretary,  so  that  the  Court  cannot  tell  what  is  passed,  nor  cann  the  secretary 
give  any  true  coppye  to  such  as  long  waite,  to  their  great  prejudice,  for  the 
same,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  that  from  henceforth  the  clarke  to  the  Howse  of 
Deputjes  shall  forthw"",  from  time  to  time,  send  vp  such  bills  as  are  passed 
both  howses,  and  last  w"^  them,  to  the  secretary,  and  the  secretary  is  to  send 
doune  to  the  clarke  such  bills  or  orders  as  last  past  amongst  the  Magistrates, 
that  he  may  take  notice  thereof. 

Whereas  wee  finde  by  experience  that  notw^standing  any  provision  for-  juro^recom- 
merly  made  to  prevent  chardge  and  trouble  w"'  respect  vnto  Courts  called  ^^°-''^- 
vppon  slender  grounds,  at  the  requests  of  private  persons,  in  which  sundry 
men  are  draune  from  their  imployments  to  attend  the  same,  w^'out  any  con- 
siderable satisfaccbn,  this  Couit,  being  vnlling  to  remoove  occasions  of  com- 
plaint in  this  kind,  doe  order,  that  from  henceforth,  in  all  perticuler  and 
speciall  Courts  called  vppon  the  request  of  private  men,  euery  juror  shall  be 
allowed  for  their  attendance  on  that  service  fower  shillings  a  day,  to  be  pajd 
by  them  vppon  whose  motion  it  is  graunted,  provided  the  sajd  jurymen  shall 
beare  their  oune  chardges  in  dyett. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  gallowes  be  taken  doune  from  the  place  where  it  Remoovai  of 
now  stands,  and  forthw*"^  remooved  into  a  convenient  place  of  coinon  w"'in  the     ^  ^^ 
precincts  of  Boston,  and  be  sett  vp  againe  forthwith,  at  the  coinon  chardge,  in 
the  place  the  select  men  of  Boston  shall  appolnte. 

*Whereas  it  was  ordered  in  a  former  Courte,  that  some  course  should  be        1*3.] 
taken  for  the  renewing  of  the  countryes  stocke  of  pouder,  which  yett,  notw*-  Cap'  Atherton 
standing,  hath  not  prooved  efFectuall  for  the  attainement  of  our  desires  therein,  gcnn"  coniis- 
60  that  the  countrves  store  is  not  so  augmented  as  was  then  intended,  that  a  ^'°" '°  p"''" 

*'  "  chase  pouder. 

more  ample  supply  thereof  may  be  made,  itt  is  ordered  by  tlris  Court  and  the 
authoritie  thereof,  that  the  countrje  rates  of  Roxbury,  Dorchester,  and  Ded- 
ham,  for  this  yeere  ensewing,  shall  be  assigned  to  the  surveyo''  generall  and 
Cap?  Humphi7  Atherton  to  buy  pouder  w*all  the  first  oppertunity  that 
f>sents. 


4  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  50.  "Whereas,  In  suites  and  acctions  brought  into  Courts  betweene  party  and 

''    ~^    party,  sometimes  the  plamtiffe,  and  sometimes  the  defendant,  and  sometimes 

22  May. 

P  itv  fo  neither  of  them,  doe  attend  to  answer  when  they  are  called  to  prosecute 
plaint,  or  de-     or  answer,  which  hath  binn  to  long  connived  at  by  the  magistrates,  and  much 

fend^'s  not  ap- 
pearance or       time  lost  in  sending  to  seeke  them  out,  or  waite  their  coming  in,  whereby  the 

caU  '^  ''^  countryes  chardge  is  encreased,  and  the  magistrates,  jurors,  wittnesses,  and 
others  abused,  contrary  to  the  laudable,  reasonable  practize  and  custome  of  all 
Courts  in  our  native  countrje,  and  other  countrjes  knoune  vnto  vs,  itt  is  there- 
fore hereby  ordered  and  enacted,  that  if  any  plaintife,  he  or  shee,  have 
entered  any  action  to  be  trjed  in  any  Courte,  or  which  comes  orderly  into  any 
Courte  by  replevin,  appeale,  or  by  the  disagreement  betweene  the  magistrates 
and  jury  in  an  inferior  Courte,  and  doe  not  by  him  or  hirself,  or  by  their  at- 
torney, make  their  appearance,  and  prosecute  their  action  jiiiediately  after  they 
have  binn  three  times  called  in  the  Courte  by  name,  after  the  first  forenoone  of 
the  Courte,  that  then  they  shall  be  nonsuited ;  and  if  plaintife  or  defendant 
appeare  vppon  such  call,  they  shall  have  their  costs  graunted  by  the  Courte 
against  him  that  doth  not  appeare ;  and  if  afterwards  both  partjes  doe  agree  to 
trye  their  case  the  same  Courte,  they  shall  be  allowed  so  to  doe,  the  plaintif 
paying  halfe  so  much  for  a  new  entry  as  he  did  before ;  and  if  any  person 
This  order  to  presented  by  the  grandjury  for  any  offence,  or  soinoned  by  a  magistrate  to 
first  Co''°t'  ^  answer  any  crime,  doe  not,  vppon  somons,  appeare  at  the  time  appointed 
September        vppon  the  thii'd  Call,  as  aforesajd,  he  or  shee  shall  be  proceeded  against  for 

next. 

contempt,  except  he  or  shee  be  restrajned  or  prevented  by  the  hand  of  God. 

GoSno'"  gratu-  The  Court  doth  w"^  all  thankfulnes  acknowledge  the  good  service  of  John 

Endecott,  Es^,  our  late  honnored  Gouemor,  in  respect  of  his  great  care  and 
faithfullnes  in  the  dischardge  of  that  trust  w'^''  was  coinitted  to  him,  and  doe, 
in  the  behalfe  of  the  countrje,  render  him  harty  thankes  therefore,  and  doe 
heereby  order  the  Treasurer  to  pay  vnto  him  one  hundi-ed  markes,  as  a  slender 
mannifestacon  of  their  dew  respects  vnto  him,  vntill  they  shallbe  better  able  to 
declare  it,  &  this  to  be  out  of  this  next  country  levy,  not  doubting  of  his  kind 
acceptance  thereof. 
[*4.]  *Whereas  the  lawe  concerning  fencing  against  great  cattell,  foli  7,  Harmes 

Harmes  not      donne  by  Great  Cattle  in  Fenced  Ground  shall  be  viewed  and  judged,  ffor  ex- 

veiwed  in 

fenced  grounds  planacon  whereof  tliis  Courte  declareth  and  ordereth,  that  notw"' standing  the 
any  mans°ac-  ^^J^  provision  in  the  Said  lawe,  in  case  any  trespasse  donne  in  fenced  grounds, 
bon.  by  -wliat  occasion  soeuer,  the  partie  trespassed  shall  not  be  barred  afterwards  of 

his  action,  albeit  the  harmes  be  not  viewed  and  judged  according  to  the  direc- 
tion of  the  sajd  recited  lawe.  And  it  is  further  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that 
in  case  of  involuntary  trespasses,  where  such  trespasser  shall  pay,  or  legally 


IN^I< 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN^NEW    ENGLAND.  5 

tender,  full  recompence  for  all  the  damages  donne  by  him,  before  any  suite      165  0. 
coinenced,  the  plaiutiffc  shall  recouer  no  costs  in  the  suite.  "       '        ' 

Whereas  the  Countie  Court  at  Boston,  by  order  of  the  Generall  Court,  „  *''' 

•'  •'  '   County  Court 

have  begunu  to  be  kept  vpon  the  last  Thirsday  in  July,  October,  January,  and  <iayes  for  Suf 

Aprill,  itt  is  now  for  some  reasons  by  this  Coui-t  ordered  and  appointed,  that 

fi-om  henceforth  they  shall  alwayes  begin  vpon  the  last  Twesdayes  of  efly  of 

the  sajd  nioueths,  as  all  other  Courts  doe,  except  the  Court  of  Eleccon,  "which, 

by  pattcnt,  is  appointed  to  be  kept  on  the  Wendsday,  and  except  all  other 

Courts  w'^'',  vpon  extraordinary  occasions,  shall  be  appointed  on  other  dajes ; 

and  because  the  comencement  this  yeere  falls  out  on  the  last  Tuesday  in  July, 

the  County  Court  for  Suffolke  is  referred  to  the  last  Wendsday  in  July  next, 

for  this  yeere  only,  and  afterwards  as  in  this  order  is  provided. 

M"^  James  Cary  is  appointed  to  be  clarke  of  the  writts  for  Charles  Townc,  M'  James  Cary 
in  the  place  of  M'  Edward  Mellowes,  lately  deceased.  writts  ^r^ 

Ensigne  Hewlett,  Cap?  Sebastian  Brigham,  Mathew  Boyes,  and  Robert  Charistounc. 

,  ,      ,  Comisson"  to 

Hazeltine,  or  any  three  of  them,  are  appouited  comissioners  to  lay  out  the  uy  out  Haver 
bounds  of  Haverill  betweene  Haverill  and  Salisbury,  and  all  the  bounds  of  '     ""°  ^ 
Haveiill,  and  make  retourne  thereof  vnto  the  next  session  of  the  Generall 
Coui-te. 

Whereas  by  experience  it  is  found  that  the  day  of  the  artilliiy  company  Liberty  to  alter 
meeting  in  Boston,  being  vpon  the  second  day  of  the  weeke,  is  inconvenient  uttary  compa- 
in  divers  respects,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  it  shall  be  in  the  "^"^^  meeting, 
libertje  of  the  sajd  company  to  alter  the  day  of  their  meeting  to  any  other  day 
of  the  weeke  w'^''  they  shall  make  choyce  of. 

For  explanacon  of  that  part  of  the  printed  lawe  intituled  Mill?  Affaires,  S:  Ordinance  not 
10,  conce'^ing  the  surveyo"^  general],  touching  the  coinon  armes  of  the  coun- 
trje,  itt  is  ordered  and  heereby  declared,  that  his  power  neither  doth  nor  shall 
extend  to  the  selling  or  alienating  any  of  the  ordinance,  or  the  great  artilliry, 
or  any  the  appurtenances  thereof,  vpon  any  pretence  whatsoeuer,  w*out  speciall 
order  of  the  Generall  Court,  any  lawe,  comission,  custome,  or  vsage  to  the  con- 
traiy  notw"'standing. 

♦Whereas,   by  an  order   of  Coiui  heretofore  made,  all  plaintifes  were        [*5.] 

restrained  from  taking  out  of  attachments  against  any  defendant,  (except  in  Plaintiffes  lib- 
erty to  take 
some  cases  in  the  sajd   order   expressed,  some  of  which  cases  were  also  of  out  suSious  or 

doubtfuU  interpretacon,)  whereby  many  plaintiffes  have  bin  sometimes  delajd,  agCnydefend'. 

and  at  other  times  frustrated  in  obtayning   their  just   debts,  the   defendants 

rather  choosing  to  pay  some  smale  costs  for  non  apearaunce  vpon  a  sumons, 

and  so  wynne  time,  or  convey  away  their  goods,  or  sell  their  estates,  itt  is 

therefore  hereby  ordered  and  enacted,  that  fi-oni  this  time  forwards  it  shall  be 


Q  THE  RECO^S  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  G  5  0.      at  eiiery  plaintives  cliojce  to  take  out  other  sumons  or  attachments  against  any 

" "f       ^    defendant,  any  thing  in  the  former  order  notw^'standing. 

"'^'  To  the  end  the  ponder,  bulletts,  and  match  charged  upon  each  towne  to 

Since  renewed  -^ 

for  4)viuon  of  provide  be  not  neglected,  and  all  ground  of  excuse,  on  pretence  of  ignorance 
of  the  lawe,  remooved  and  prevented,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary  shall 
forthw'''  send  a  coppie  of  the  former  order  to  each  toune  in  this  jiu-isdiccon, 
putting  the  sixth  month  for  the  ffowerth  month,  and  requiring  the  counstable 
and  cheife  millitary  officer,  where  no  select  men  are,  to  execute  the  sajd  order 
for  assessing  theii-  inhabitants,  and  providing  soiddiers  in  noumber  more  or 
lesse  than  fiffty  souldjers,  and  that  they  deliver  it  vnto  the  two  cheife  officers 
of  each  company,  safely  to  bestowe  and  order,  for  the  best  advantage  of  the 
countrje. 

Comittee  to  Whereas  there  hath  binn  an  order  formerly  made  in  wliich  severall  per- 

i  accompt.  sons  have  binn  authorized  as  a  comittee  to  take  the  treasurers  accompt,  which 


urers  : 


yett  hath  neuer  binn  doune,  although  a  thing  much  desired  by  the  country, 
this  Court,  beiug  vnwilhng  to  suffer  such  great  accompts  to  lye  any  longer  as 
now  they  do%  doe  order,  that  IM"^  NoAvell,  Cap?  Roi3t  Keajne,  M"^  Anthony 
Stoddard,  and  M"'  Joseph  Hills,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  have  power,  and 
are  hereby  authorized,  to  heare  and  examine  accompts  which  concerne  the 
country,  either  betweene  the  auditor  generall  and  the  Treasurer,  or  any  others 
in  which  the  country  is  interested ;  and  doe  hereby  further  give  power  to 
acquitt  and  dischardge  the  Treasurer  either  in  full,  or  in  so  farr  as  he  shall  be 
able  to  give  a  satisfactory  accoumpt,  provided  our  sajd  coiiiittee  shallbe  ac- 
coumptable  to  this  Generall  Courte  at  their  next  session,  and  the  Treasm-er  to 
call  vpon  the  auditor  generall  and  the  comittee  to  hasten  the  accomplishment 
thereof. 

HaTcrill  com-  John  Cleouients,  Henry  Palmer,  and  Thomas  Davies,  of  HaverUl,  are  ap- 

Bmaie  causes  pointed  and  authorised  to  end  smale  cawses  there  for  this  next  yeare,  acording 
to  lawe. 

Maidens  towne  At  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Maiden,  the  Court  approoves  of  this  ni''ke, 

M.,  to  be  their  toune  marke  for  the  marking  of  their  cattle. 

Meadfeiid  Cap?  Robert  Keajne  and  M''  Edward  Jackson,  coinissioners  appointed  by 

the  Generall  Court  to  lay  out  the  bounds  of  the  new  village  issuing  out  of 
Dedham,  according  to  the  graunt  the  last  Court  made  to  them,  as  therein 
more  largely  appeares,  made  their  retourne  to  this  Court,  that  they  had  lajd  it 
out  thus,  viz. :  that  it  beginns  at  a  smale  hill  or  iland  in  the  meadow,  on 
the  west  side  of  Charles  Eiver,  and  running  from  thence  about  full  west  three 
mil[es],  and  thence  turning  a  south  Hne,  ended  at  Charles  River  at  three  miles 
and  a  q[uart]er,  this  line  being  there  shorter  then  by  the  graunt  it  was  allowed  to 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 

be  ;  but  axpted  by  the  gramitees,  the  sajd  river  is  aj)ointecI  to  be  the  bounds  from 
that  place  x  the  place  where  the  first  line  beganne.  This  returne  was  accepted. 
Approved. 

*Att  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Dedliam,  the  village  there  is  by        [*6.] 
this  Courte  named  ]\Ieadfeild.  Dedham  vU- 

/~i  •  •  p  /-I  T)    1-  •  '"^'^  called 

Whereas  the  Generall  Coiu't,  in  answer  to  a  peticSn  of  Cap?  Robt  Keajue,  Meadfeiid. 
Richard  Broune,  of  Watertoune,  and  Eichai'd  Parker,  of  Boston,  for  the  lay-  ^''P*-  '^''"'^• 

Rich.  Broune, 

ing  out  of  their  seuerall  proporcbns  of  land,  in  such  place  as  they  should  find  &  Ric.  Parkers 
out,  did,  in  the  yeere  1649,  graunt  coinission  to  M'  Edward  Jackson  to  sec 
the  same  donne  in  the  place  in  that  order  menconed  next  to  Dedham  village, 
as  in  that  order,  dated  23**  of  October,  1649,  more  amply  appeai-eth,  m''"'' 
acordingly,  w"*  M''  Danforth,  of  Cambridge,  a  surveyor,  was  donne,  and  by 
the  sajd  commissioners  hand  retourned  into  this  Coiut,  w"^"^  at  their  request  was 
graunted  to  be  recorded  amongst  the  Court  records,  provided  the  just  right 
of  any  Indian  to  any  part  of  these  lands  was  to  be  and  is  excepted. 

Lajd  vnto  Capt  Rob?  Keajne,  vpon  Pacussett  Hill,  beyond  the  new  vil- 
ladge  of  Dedham,  called  Meadfeiid,  and  w"'out  the  line  thereof,  one  thousand 
and  seventy  fewer  ackers  of  meadow  and  vpland,  being  bounded  by  M''  John 
Aliens  farme  on  the  south,  Charles  Riuer  south  and  by  east,  east  and  north- 
east, M'  Richard  Broimes  farme  on  the  north  and  northwest,  comon  land  north 
and  by  west,  west  and  northwest. 

Ittem.  Laid  out  to  M''  Richard  Broune  two  hundred  ackers  of  meadow  and 
vpland,  being  bounded  by  Cap?  Rofet  Keaines  on  the  south  and  southwest, 
Charles  River  east,  and  M"^  Richard  Parker  northwest,  comon  land  northwest 
and  west. 

Item.  Lajd  out  M'  Richaid  Parker  fower  hundred  tliii'ty-six  ackers,  be- 
ing bounded  by  M'^  Richard  Broune  on  the  south,  Charles  River  southeast, 
the  vpland  on  the  riverett  running  into  Charles  River  on  the  east  and  by 
southeast,  and  northeast,  comon  land  west,  to  continew  so  farr  vpon  the  riuerett, 
taking  in  the  meadow  on  both  sides,  as  lyeth  on  the  east  side  of  the  path  going 
from  Pacussitt  to  Naticke,  w"^  one  hundred  ackers  more  added  thereto,  w'^'' 
was  sold  vnto  him  by  John  Johnson,  surveyo'  gennerall. 

In  ans'  to  a  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Haverill,  for  the  graunt  of  an  Land  Rraunted 
iland  to  them,  which  lyeth  against  some  part  of  their  toune,  contajnig  about  aitionaii,. 
twenty  or  thirty  ackers,  the  Court  graimts  their  request,  provided  M''  Ward 
make  not  a  cleere  title  to  him  from  this  Court  appeare  w'Mn  three  yeres  to  the  land,  laid  to 

.  J   .,       J  Thomas  Dud- 

sajd  lland.  l^.^  Encrease 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Dudley,  Es{f>,  and  Increase  Nowell,  Lowell,  exee- 
gen?,  as  execute"  to  the  last  will  of  M'  Isacke  Johnson,  for  tliree  thousand  Johnson. 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


Pounds  grant- 
ed to  Maj' 
Edw.  Gibbons 
from  the  collo- 
njes. 


[*7.] 

Majo'  Genn" 
Gibbons  dis- 
chardged. 
30  May. 


Ans'  to  Jane 
Hawkins  pet. 


Ans'  to  M" 
Eliza  Coles 
petic. 


Ans'  to  Jo. 
Pullin  petic. 

Ans'  to  Johij 

Shermans 

petic. 


and  two  huudrecT  ac''^  of  land  out  of  the  bounds  of  this  jurisdlccbn,  as  his  pro- 
portion for  fowcr  hundred  pounds  adventured  &  lajd  out  in  the  coiuon  stock 
w*  should  have  binn  lajd  out  in  the  first  divident,  the  Court  graunts  their 
request  for  thi-eesousand  and  two  himdred  ackers  of  land,  to  be  lajd  out  any- 
where in  tliis  jurisdiccon  not  disposed  of,  so  as  they  take  it  together,  in  one 
place. 

The  coiiiissioners  of  the  Vnited  CoUonjes,  at  their  meeting  at  Boston  in 
the  yeere  1647,  agreed  that  Majo""  Edwai-d  Gibbons  should  have  twenty  pounds 
pajd  vnto  him  from  all  the  coUonjes  for  his  expenses  when  the  last  wai-r 
should  have  bin  made  against  the  Narragansetts,  which,  by  their  submission, 
was  stayed,  and  that  this  collony  should  pay  the  same,  and  they  would  accompt 
to  this  collony  for  their  proporccins  out  of  the  wampam  peage  to  be  receaved 
from  the  Narragansetts.  This  Court  doth  order  the  auditor  to  signe  a  bill  to 
the  Treasurer  for  the  payment  of  the  sajd  Majo'^  Edward  Gibbons  the  sajd 
twenty  pounds  acordingly. 

♦Whereas  there  hath  binn  for  some  space  of  time  diuers  accompts  de- 
pending betweene  the  country  and  Edward  Gibbons,  Es^,  majo"^  generall, 
and  that  vpon  examinaoon  no  great  matter  of  diffirence  appeares  in  the 
accompt  betwixt  him  and  the  audito'  generall,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by 
this  Comt,  that  Major  Gibbons  shall  be,  &  heereby  is,  fully  acquitted  and 
dischardged  of  and  from  all  debts  and  demands  respecting  the  country,  from 
the  begining  of  the  world  to  the  day  of  the  date  hereof,  he  requiring  nothing 
fi-om  the  country  to  this  date.     30'"  3*,  1650. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Jane  Hawkins,  ^sented  to  the  Generall  Court 
by  hu-  sonns  in  hir  behalf  for  liberty  to  come  into  the  jurisdiccon  of  the  Mas- 
satusetts,  &S,  itt  is  ordred  that  the  sajd  Jane  Hawkins  shall  have  hberty  to 
come  and  stay  in  this  jurisdiccon  one  month  anytime  tliis  somer,  and  shee  is 
left  to  her  libertje  to  give  satisfaccon  to  the  next  Courte  of  Asistants,  which 
if  they  accept  of,  they  shall  have  libertje  to  admitt  her  into  tliis  jurisdic5on. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  M''^  Elizabeth  Cole,  the  Court  conceaves  they 
have  seuerall  times  formerly  (in  ans"^  to  peticons  of  like  natiu-e)  donne  what 
they  conceave  fully  just,  vnder  which  the  peticbner  ought  to  rest  hii-self 
satisfyed. 

In  ans'  to  a  peticon  of  John  Pullin,  the  Court  leaves  him  to  his  remedy 
in  an  ordinary  Court  of  justice. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  John  Sherman,  for  the  remittment  of  the  for- 
feiture of  his  band  for  Robt  Palmer,  or  respecting  the  execution  thereof,  for 
some  further  time,  he  being  allowed  liberty  till  the  end  of  June  next  by  the 
County  Courte,  tliis  Courte  seeth  no  cawse  to  graunt  any  remittment  of  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  9 

fine,  his  offence  being  of  so  high  a  nature,  as  so  great  a  contempt  of  authority,      165  0. 
(as  it  was,)  but  conceave  it  meet  to  graunt  the  peticon"'^  request  to  respitt  the    *"^       ^       ' 
execution,  or  levying  of  that  fine  or  forfeiture,  for  three  mouths  from  the  end  "^' 

of  June  next. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticou  of  George  Munings,  the  Court  doth  order  that  M'  Ans'  to  George 
Anthony  Stoddard  and  Thomas  Marshall,  of  Boston,  shall  take  care  for  the  pcti^"'"^ 
needfull  repajration  of  the  prison  keepers  howsc,  and  other  things  about  the 
prison,  w"'  all  convenjent  speed ;  and  what  shall  be  expended  In  the  accom- 
plishment thereof  shall  be  allowed  them  by  the  Treasurer  out  of  the  country 
rate  of  Boston. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Clarke,  the  Court,  w""  the  consent  of  Ans'  to  xhom- 
the  officer  for  custome,  doe  graunt  &  order  the  dcliuery  of  the  eighty  four  ^^    "  epetic. 
moose  skins  forfeited  by  him,  the  sajd  Thomas  Clarke,  he  paying  only  cus- 
tome for  the  same. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  W"  Phillips,  the  Court  doth  order  and  appolnte  Ans'  to  w» 
the  Treasurer  to  satisfy  and  pay  the  peticbner  his  full  proportion  dew  to  him      '   '"*'"' '"' 
from  the  country,  as  other  creditors  doe  receave. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Sudbury,  the  Court  graunts  Ans'  to  Sud- 
theu-  petico,  and  that  the  inhabitants  of  Sudbury  should  have  their  bounds  ""^^  ^''  "^""' 
recorded,  as  it  was  graunted  by  the  Court  to  Watertoune  bounds. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Edmond  Frost,  Edmond  Angier,  John  Coojier,        [*8.] 
and  Nathaniell  Spai-auhauke,  ffeoffees  of, the  estate  of  M""  Nathaniell  Sparau-  Ans' to  the  pe 

tiuon  of  the 

hauke,  of  Cambridge,  lately  deceased,  the  Court  graunts  their  request,  and,  in  tfeotfees  of  M' 
referenc  thereto,  doth  order  that  the  sajd  ffeoffees  in  trust  shall  have  power  to  e^tae" 
dispose  of  the  estate  mentioned  in  the  peticon,  provided  they  give  caution  to  be 
responsall  vnto  this  Courte  for  the  disposing  of  it  to  the  vse  of  the  children. 

In  ans"'  to  a  peticon  from  the  inhabitants  of  Boston,  the  Court  is  willing  Ans' to  Boston 
to  graunt  the  peticoners  a  corporacou,  if  the  ai-tickles  or  termes,  priviledges 
and  iiSunitjes,  thereof  were  so  psented  as  rationally  shordd  appeare,  respecting 
the  meane  condicou  of  the  countrje,  fitt  for  the  Court  to  graunt;  ^senting 
their  propositions  to  the  next  sessions. 

In  ans'^  to  the  peticon  of  Maiy  Woody,  of  Eoxbury,  widdow,  for  power  Ans'  to  Mary 

"WoodB'v  pcti* 

to  act  as  an  executrix  to  the  last  will  of  John  Woodey,  hir  late  husband,  the  jon. 
Coiu't  graunts  hir  request. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticou  of  M'  Adam  Winthrop,  on  the  behalf  of  Cap?  Ans'  to  M' 
Stephen  "Winthrop,  the  Court  doth  appoint  Cap?  W""  Hauthorn,  M"^  Thomas  throps  peticon. 
Laughton,  and  Left  Richard  Walker  as  commissioners  to  view  the  plan  therein 
mencSned,  to  examine  all  matters  concerning  the  peticon,  to  compare  it  w"" 
the  graunt,  and  make  their  retourne  to  this  Courte. 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  2 


10  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1  G  5  0.  In  ans"'  to  the  pcticou  of  John  Geclney,  of  Salem,  the  Court  doth  graunt 

^  that  the  peticoner  paying  twenty  pounds  for  his  last  yeeres  rent  for  di'awing 

30  May.  . 

Ans'  to  John     "^^^i  lie  shall  pay  but  ffiiiteene  pounds  for  liis  rent  for  this  next  yeere. 
Gedneys  pe-  j^^  g^jjgr  ^q  jj^g  peticon  of  Henry  Short,  of  Newberry,  the  Court  doth 

tico. 

Ans'  to  Henry  order,  that  the  peticoner  shall  have  liberty,  and  is  hereby  impowi-ed,  to  sue  any 

Shorts  peticon.  «  ,  -uroi-r^  •-nii 

jierson  tor  any  rents  or  ai-rears  dew  to  JM''  otephen  JJomner,  now  in  Ji,ngiana, 
and  vjjon  receipt  thereof  to  acquitt  and  dischardge  the  same. 
Ans'  to  Henry  In  ans'  to  the  peticou  of  Henry  AValton,  the  Court  doth  remitt  the  one 

Waltons  pe- 

halfe  of  the  penalty  w"''  the  peticone''  is  liable  to  pay,  being  the  countryes  dew. 


tlCO. 


which  is  seven  pounds  three  shillings  &  sevenpence  halfepenny. 


Ans'  to  ffree-  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  freemen  of  Exeter,  the  Court  doth  graunt 

peticon.  'hat  they  shall  have  liberty  to  choose  on  for  constable  that  hath  taken  the  oath 

of  fidelity  as  is  desired,  provided  the  County  Court  approove  of  the  person  as 

fitt  for  the  place. 
Ans'  to  Andey  In  ans'^  to  the  peticon  of  Andey  Palmer,  widdow,  the  Court  graunts  Mr 

Pahners  pe- 

ticon.  request. 

Ans'  to  Eiizab.  lu  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Elizabeth  Peck,  the  Court  thinks  meete  to  re- 

Pecks  peticon.        .         ,  .,^  />  c  l  -it  r>        n  •      i    •  i 

nutt  the  peticou''s  nne  oi  tenn  shilhngs  lor  hir  lying,  but  order  the  security 

given  for  hir  husbands  fine  of  tlilrty  shillings  remajne  in  force  still,  and  that 

only  is  respited  till  he  come  againe. 

[*9.]  *In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Thomas  Makepeas,  of  Boston,  the  Court  doth 

Ans'  to  M'        remitt  the  one  halfe  of  the  forfeiture  of  certaiue  boards  nienconed  in  the  peti- 

Makepeas 

petic.  tion,  w"^''  is  the  countryes  right,  but  cannot  give  away  the  other  halfe  of  the 

forfeiture,  which  is  the  officers  right. 
Coffiittee  to  M"^  Bellingham,  M''  Nowell,  M'  Willoughby,  Capt  W™  Hauthorne,  ]\I"- 

catoria  ^    ^     Audito'  Generall,  and  M"^  John  Allen  are  appointed  a  coiiiittee  to  pervse  and 

duly  consider  of  the  booke  intituled  Lex  Mercatorja,  and  make  retoiu'ne  of  what 

they  conceave  therein  maybe  necessarily,  vsefully,  and  beneficjally  improoved, 

for  the  dividing  of  maritjne  afikjres  in  this  jurisdiccon,  to  the  next  session  of 

this  Court,  and  they  ai-e  desired  to  meete  thereabouts  the  thhd  day  of  the 

sixth  month  next. 
Ans' to  Bassats  In  aus^'  to  the  petition  of  W™  Bassatt,  of  Sandwitch,  for  the  release  of 

nyne  bushells  of  pease,  forfeited  for  not  entring  the  same  as  the  lawe  requires, 

the  Court  judgeth  the  whole  forfeitiu-e  should  be  taken. 
Sampson  Sampson  Shore,  of  Boston,  being  to  give  testimony  in  the  case  of  the 

°'^   ""^         S''j'^  Bassat  about  the  nyne  bushells  of  pease,  for  saying  wee  had  as  good  have 

taken  so  many  pease  out  from  his  howse,  for  his  offence  therein  was  fined  fforty 

shilHngs. 

Gowinga  fine 

of  v".  In  ans"'  to  the  peticftn  of  Robert  Gouing,  for  remittment  of  the  fine  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  JJ 

tenne  pounds  for  selling  a  gunne  to  the  Indjans,  the  Court  remitts  the  on      16  5  0. 

halfe  thereof.  ^ 1^ ' 

In  aus'  to  the  petiwn  of  M'  Simon  Bradstreet,  desiiin?  eight  hundred  ^^' 

'  o       o  xns'  to  M' 

ac''s  of  land,  dew  to  him  from  the  country,  might  be  lajd  out  next  or  nere  to  Bradstreet  pe 
the  faimes  grauntcd  to  Capt  Keajue,  ^M"'  Broune,  and  M"'  Parker,  if  it  be  there 
to  be  had,  not  pjudicing  the  village  propounded  for  to  this  Court  by  M'  Eliott, 
in  the  behalfe  of  the  Indjans,  the  Court  graimts  his  request. 

In  ans'  to  the  petlcbn  of  M''  John  Wilson,  Sen,  of  Boston,  for  liberty  ^  lay  Ans'  to  M' 
out  the  thousand  ac''s  of  laud  formerly  graunted  him  by  this  Court  next  or  ticon'"'^  ^'^' 
ncere  to  the  eight  hundred  ac's  graunted  to  M'  Bradstreet  by  this  Court,  if  it 
be  there  to  be  had,  the  Court  doth  graunt  his  request,  and  if  it  be  not  there 
to  be  had,  doe  graunt  him  liberty  to  lay  it  out  in  any  place  w^'in  this  jurisdiccon, 
not  hindering  a  plantacon. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Robert  Saltonstall,  for  certajne  lands  dew  to  his  Ans'  to  M' 
flfather,  S"'  Richard  Saltonstall,  for  ffowcr  hundred  pounds  lajd  out  by  him  in  stalls  njtic""' 
the  coinon  stocke,  the  Coiut  doth  graunt  the  peticoner  threesousand  ac''s  of  soooacs 
land  in  any  part  of  this  jurisdiccon,  so  as  he  p>sent  the  place  where  he  would 
have  it,  befor  the  20""  of  October  next,  to  tliis  Court ;  and  his  foiTuer  graunt 
of  this  land  menooned  in  his  peticon  is  heereby  made  voyde. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  John  Bartlett,  of  Newbery,  the  Court,  being  sat-  John  Bartletts 
isfactorily  informed  of  the  truth  of  the  peticbners  endeavor  to  satisfy  the  end 
of  the  law  in  providing  weights  and  measm-es,  doe  release  him  of  his  fine  of 
forty  shillings. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Destauriers,  a  French  marchant,  for  the  remit-  Ans'  to  De- 
ting  his  fine  of  fiifity  pounds,  imposed  on  him  by  a  County  Court   for  his  French  mar- 
abuse  of  authority,  the  Court  thiaks  meete  to  remitt  to  him  twenty  and  five  '='''^"''  pc'i^on- 
pounds  thereof. 

*In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Boston  for  the  repealing  the        [*10.] 
law  reqiuring  custome  from  the  inhabitants  of  the  seuerall  collonjes  ffbr  goods  Law  requiring 

,  111  •  I'i*  1/-^  /-!_•  j'i_i      customs  of  the 

exported  or  imported  by  them  into  this  oi  oiu's,  the  Court  (being  credibly  5^.31,  (.oiinnjes 
informed  that  the  Coui-t  at  Conecticott  will,  for  the  jpsent,  suspend  the  taking  suspended. 
of  any  custome  of  vs,  and  at  their  next  Generall  Coui-te  intend  to  repeale 
their  order  that  requires  it)  doe  hereby  order  the  suspention  of  that  law  of 
ours  that  requires  any  custome  of  the  other  confederate  colonjes,  vntUl  they 
shall  know  that  Conecticott  doe  take  custome  of  vs. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  DanjeU  Gookin,  Edward  Collins,  w"^  the  rest  of  Oucrscers  & 

execute's  of  y* 

the  ouerseers  and  executo'^  of  the  estate  of  M'  Thomas  Shepheard,  deceased,  estate  of  M' 
late  pastor  to  the  church  at  Cambrjdge,  for  power  to  sell  certaine  wood  lands  ^■^^l^\^Jf' 
therein  mencbned,  the  Court  finding  the  wyddow  to  allow  &  approove  of  the 


12 


THE    RECOKDS    OP    THE    COLONY    OP 


1650. 

30  May. 

Ans'  to  Ra- 
chell  Cookes 
peticon. 


Coui'ts  resolu- 
tion of  M'  Nel- 
sons letf  of 
attor.  to  M' 
Dumer. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Dunsters  pe- 
ticon. 


[ni.] 


petiobn'"''  request,  doe  graunt  the  peticone''^  libertje  &  power  to  sell  the  land 
menconed,  they  giving  caution  to  be  responsall  to  this  Gennerall  Court,  before 
the  end  of  this  session. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Kachell  Cooke,  wyddow,  for  the  abatement  and 
remittment  of  a  fine  of  five  pounds,  imposed  by  Ipswich  Courte  on  Thomas 
Cooke,  hir  late  husband,  for  his  abusive  speeches  against  authority,  the  Court, 
being  informed  of  the  miserable  estate  the  widdow  is  left  in,  doth  graunt  hir 
request,  and  remitts  the  whole  fine  to  hir. 

Vpon  survey  of  a  certaiue  writing  ^sented  vnto  the  Courte,  wherein 
Thomas  Nelson,  late  of  Rowley,  hath  constituted  M"'  Richard  Duiner  and  im- 
powred  him  as  his  lawfuU  attourney,  for  the  disposing  of  his  estate,  as  by  the 
said  writing  more  fully  apeares,  this  Courte,  for  the  satisfaccon  of  John  Palmer, 
of  Rowley,  and  at  his  request,  doth  declare,  that  the  power  soc  given  and 
coinitted  vnto  M''  Duiner  afForesajd  is  good  and  according  to  lawe,  and  tliat 
he  may  act  therein  w*''out  any  further  confirmacon  of  the  same. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Henry  Dunster,  p>sident  of  Harvard  Colledge, 
the  Court  dotli  graunt  and  appoint  M''  Danforth,  the  surveyor,  of  Cambridge, 
shall  have  power,  w"^  one  as  the  executo'^s  of  M"^  Israeli  Stoughton  shall 
nominat,  &  w'''  such  another  as  they  two  shall  agree  vpon  as  a  third  person, 
to  lay  out  vnto  Harvard  Colledge  the  land  given  by  the  sajd  M''  Stoughton 
to  the  sajd  Harvard  Colledge  as  a  legacy  ;  and  the  Court  doth  redily  graunt 
the  Colledge  exemption  from  all  customes  in  the  peticon  menconed ;  and  that 
the  hundred  pounds  the  country  oweth  the  colledge  should  be  pajd  into  them, 
as  it  was  formerly  appointed ;  and  that  they  cannot  finde  a  way  to  alter  the 
agreements  w'''  the  ferry  men  w'^'out  their  consent.  And  in  ans'  to  his 
desires  for  a  corporacon,  the  Court  doth  graunt  his  request,  in  these  termes : 
Whereas,  through  the  good  hand  of  God,  many  well  devoted  persons  have 
binn,  and  dajly  are,  mooved  and  stirred  vp  to  give  and  bestovte  sundry  guifts, 
legacies,  lands,  and  revenewes  for  the  advancement  of  all  good  litterature, 
arts,  and  sciences  in  Harvard  Colledge,  in  Cambridge,  in  the  county  of 
Midlesex,  and  to  the  maintenance  of  the  pra3sident  and  ifellowes,  and  for  all 
accoinodacons  of  buildings,  and  all  other  necessary  provisions  that  may  conduce 
to  the  education  of  the  English  and  Indjan  youth  of  this  country  in  knowl- 
edge and  godliness,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  and  enacted  by  this  Court  and  the 
authoritje  thereof,  that  for  the  fmthering  of  so  good  a  worke,  *and  for  the 
purposes  aforesaid,  ffrom  henceforth  that  the  sajd  Colledge  in  Cambridge, 
in  Midlesex,  in  New  England,  shall  be  a  corporacon  consisting  of  seven  per- 
sons, viz.,  a  praesident,  five  fellowes,  and  a  treasurer  or  biu'ser  ;  and  that 
Henry  Dunster  shall  be  the  first  prsesident,  Samuell  Mather,  Samuell  Danford, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  13 

m''s  of  art,  Jonathan  !Michell,  Comfort  Starr,  and  Samuell  Eaton,  (batchclors      1  G  5  0. 
of  art,)  shall  be  the  five  fellowes,  and  Thomas  Danford  to  be  present  treasurer,  ''       ^ 

all  of  them  being  inhabitants  in  the  Bay,  and  shall  be  the  first  seven  persons 
of  which  the  sajd  corporacon  shall  consist ;  and  that  the  sajd  seven  persons,  or  The  coiicdi^e 
the  greater  noumber  of  them,  procuring  the  presence  of  the  ouerseers  of  the 
College,  and  by  their  counsell  and  consent,  shall  have  power,  and  are  hereby 
authorised,  at  any  time  or  times,  to  elect  a  new  praesident,  fFellowes,  or  treasurer, 
so  oft  and  from  time  to  time  as  any  of  the  sajd  persons  shall  dye  or  be  re- 
mooved,  which  sajd  president  and  fellowes  for  the  time  being  shall  foreuer 
heereafter,  in  name  and  fact,  be  one  body  polliticke  and  corporate,  in  lawe,  to 
all  intents  and  purposes,  and  shall  have  perpctuall  succession,  and-  shall  be 
called  by  the  name  of  Prtesident  and  Fellowes  of  Harvard  Colledge,  and  shall 
from  time  to  time  be  eligible  as  aforesajd,  and  by  that  name  they  and  their 
successors  shall  and  may  purchase  and  acquire  to  themselves,  or  take  and  re- 
ceave,  vppon  free  guift  and  donacon,  any  lands,  tennements,  or  ha-redittamcnts, 
w^'in  this  jimsdiccon  of  the  Massatusetts,  not  exceeding  five  hundred  pounds 
p  annum,  and  any  goods  and  sumes  of  money  whatsoeuer,  to  the  vse  and  be- 
hoofe  of  the  sajd  president,  ffellowes,  and  aiid  schollers  f  the  sajd  colledge, 
and  also  may  sue  and  pleade,  or  be  sued  and  impleaded,  by  the  name  aforesajd, 
in  all  Courts  and  places  of  judicature  w"'in  the  jurisdiccon  afForesajd  ;  and 
that  the  sajd  preesidcnt,  w"^  any  three  of  the  fellowes,  shall  have  power  and 
ai"e  hereby  authorized,  when  they  shall  think  fitt,  to  make  and  appoint  a 
coiiion  scale  for  the  vse  of  the  sajd  corporacon  ;  and  the  proesident  and  ffel- 
lowes, or  major  part  of  them,  from  time  to  time,  may  meete  and  choose  such 
officers  and  servants  for  the  colledge,  and  make  such  allowance  to  them,  and 
them  also  to  remoove,  and  after  death  or  remoovall  to  choose  such  others, 
and  to  make  from  time  to  time  such  orders  and  bylawes  for  the  better  order- 
ing and  carrying  on  the  worke  of  the  colledge,  as  they  shall  thinke  fitt,  pro- 
vided the  sajd  orders  be  allowed  by  the  ouerseers ;  and,  also,  that  the  presi- 
dent and  fellowes,  or  major  part  of  them,  w"'  the  treasurer,  shall  have 
power  to  make  conclusive  bargajnes  for  lands  and  tennements,  to  be  purchased 
by  the  sajd  corporacon  for  valuable  consideracon.  And,  for  the  better  order- 
ing of  the  gouernment  of  the  sajd  colledge  and  corporacon,  bee  it  enacted  by 
the  authority  aforesajd,  that  the  pra;sident  and  three  more  of  the  fellowes  shall 
and  may,  from  time  to  time,  vpon  dew  warning  or  notice,  given  by  the  prtesi- 
dent  to  the  rest,  hould  a  meeting  for  the  debateing  and  concludoing  of  aflfaii'es 
concerning  the  yffittes  and  revennewes  of  any  lands,  and  disposing  of  their 
goods  ;  provided,  that  all  the  sajd  disposings  be  acording  to  the  will  of 
the    doners,  and  for  direction  in    all    emergent   occations,  execution  of  all 


14 


THE    RECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OP 


165  0. 

30  May. 

[*12.] 


Newbcy  3 
men. 

Judgment  of 
y  Court  in 
Hingh;im  case. 


orders  and  bylawes,  and  for  the  procuring  of  a  gennerall  meeting  of  all  the 
ouerseers  and  society  in  great  and  difficult  cases,  and  in  case  of  nonagree- 
ment,*  in  all  -which  cases  aforesajd  the  conclucon  shall  be  made  by  the  major 
parte,  the  sajd  president  having  a  casting  vojce,  the  ouerseers  consenting 
therevnto ;  and  that  all  the  afibresajd  transactions  shall  tend  to  and  for  the 
vse  and  behoofe  of  the  prsesident,  fellowes,  schoUers,  and  officers  of  the  sajd 
coUedge,  and  for  all  accomodacbns  of  buildings,  books,  and  all  other  neces- 
sary provicbns  and  furnitures  as  may  be  for  the  advauncement  and  educacon 
of  youth  in  all  manner  of  good  litterature,  arts,  and  scyences.  And  further, 
be  it  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authority  thereof,  that  all  the  lands,  tenne- 
ments,  and  haeredittamcnts,  bowses,  or  revennewes  w"^in  this  jurisdiccon,  to 
the  aforesajd  prfcsident  or  colledge  apertajning,  not  exceeding  the  valew  of 
five  hundred  pounds  p  aiium,  shall  from  henceforth  be  freed  from  all  civill 
imposicons,  taxes,  and  rates ;  all  goods  to  the  sajd  corporacon,  or  to  any  schol- 
lers  thereof,  appertajning,  shall  be  exempt  from  all  manner  of  toulle,  cus- 
tomes,  excise,  whatsoeuer ;  and  that  the  president,  fellowes,  and  schoUers, 
together  w""  the  servants  and  other  necessary  officers  to  the  sajd  praesident  or 
colledge  appertajning,  not  exceeding  ten,  viz.,  three  to  the  prsesident,  and 
seven  to  the  colledge  belonging,  shall  be  exempted  from  all  personall,  civill 
offices,  millitary  exercise,  or  services,  watchings,  and  wardings  ;  and  such  of 
their  estates,  not  exceeding  one  hundred  pounds  a  man,  shall  be  freed  from 
all  country  taxes  and  rates  whatsoeuer,  and  no  other. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Edward  "Woodman,  M''  W"  Gerrish,  and  Richard 
Kent  is  heereby  impowred  to  end  smale  cawses  there,  acording  to  lawe. 

Nathaniell  Baker,  as  plaintiff,  in  an  accon  of  the  case  vpon  a  replevin, 
comenced  a  suite  at  a  Comity  Court,  held  at  Boston,  against  the  touncsmcn  of 
Hingham,  defendant :  the  jury  found  for  the  defendant ;  the  Magis'*^  refused 
the  verdict ;  and  so  the  case  fell  to  the  cognizance  of  the  Generall  Court. 
The  whole  Court,  being  mett  together,  heard  the  case  and  all  the  evidences, 
and,  in  fine,  determined  by  vote  that  the  verdict  of  the  jury  should  be  re- 
ceaved. 

The  Court  receaving  seuerall  peticons  from  the  inhabitants  of  Patuxitt, 
and  two  peticons  from  Pomhora  and  Socononocho,  Indian  sagamores,  in  all 
which  were  complaints  of  seuerall  injurjes  donne  to  them  by  seuerall  persons 
of  Providence,  &S,  W™  Arnold,  one  of  the  peticbners,  exp>ssing  his  feare  to 
retom-ne  home  before  some  course  was  taken  for  redresse  of  the  injuries  com- 
plained of,  had  a  letter  from  this  Court,  directed.  To  such  of  Road  Hand, 
Warwicke,  Shawoamett,  Patuxitt,  or  Providence,  or  who  elssoeuer  in  any  of 
those  places  it  may  concerne. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  15 

The  Gencrall  Court  of  the  Massatusetts  thinks  meete  to  give  notice,  that      16  50. 
Pomhom,  Socanonocho,  WiUiam  Ainokl,  "W™  Carpenter,  &S,  of  Shauwamctt,    '       ^i        ' 
or  Patuxitt,  have  presented  to  them  scuerall  complaints,  contained  in  scuerall  ''^' 

_    _       _  1  '  J  Courts  letter 

peticons,  of  injurjes  donne  to  them  by  some  of  the  inhabitants  of  Eoad  Hand,  iu  y  behalf  of 
"Warwicke,  Shauwamett,  or  Patuxitt.     Tliis  Court  adviseth  all  such  whom  it  to  such  of  ' 
may  concernc  to  forbcarc  prosecutinpf  any  suites  amongst  yourselves  against  ?°"'^  "^"^' 

°  -^  °       •'  o  Warwicke,  &E, 

the   sajd  W"'  Arnold,  W"   Carpenter,   and  Pomhom,  and   Socanonocho,   or  whom  it  con- 
doing  them  any  further  injurje  respecting  their  persons  or  estates,  till  yow 
shall  lieare  further  fi'om  this  Court,  which  will  not  be  long ;  &  was  signed. 
By  the  Court. 

EDWAED   RAWSON,    Secret. 

*In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  M^^  Elizabeth  Stoughton,  of  Dorchester,       [*13.] 
wyddo,  fFor  the  approoving  and  confirming  a  bargaine  and  sale  of  certaine  ■^'"^' '°  *^" 

u  o  J        Stoughtons 

lands,  which,  w""  part  of  the  tidemills  and  other  the  appurtenances,  is  menconed  petiCon. 

in  a  deed  betweenc  hir  &  Georg  Stirke,  hir  sonne,  &  John  Milam,  of  Bos-  jf^'""^  '°^   "' 

ton,  to  whom  she  sold  the  same,  as  therein  largely  appeares,  bearing  date  the 

last  day  of  May,  1650,  this  Courte  doth  graunt  hir  request,  and  doth  approove  "^ ' 

otid  confirme  the  sajd  sale  of  hirs  to  the  sajd  John  JNIilam  and  his  heires,  ex- 

eculs,  and  assignes  for  euer. 

CajJt  Humpluy  Atherton  and  Capt  Eleazer  Lusher  are  chosen  &  ap-  Capt.  Atherton 
pointed  coinissioners  fFor  this  Generall  Courte,  to  goe  and  treat  w*''  the  Gennerall  comissioners  to 
Court  of  New  Plimouth  about  Shauwamett  and  Patuxit,  and  finally  to  con-  P'J""o"'h 

.  GeniCoutte. 

elude  thereabouts,  acording  to  their  comission  and  instruccons,  given  them  by 
this  Courte. 

1  June,  1650.  l  June. 

To  our  trusty  and  welbeloved  ffreinds,  Capt  Humphry  Atherton  and  Capt.  Athcr- 
Capt  Eleazer  Lusher :  Yow,  being  chosen  comissioners  by  the  Generall  Court,  comission. 
have  full  power  and  authoritye,  and  are  heereby  enabled,  in  their  names,  to 
consult,  agree,  and  determine  with  the  Generall  Courte,  at  Pljmouth,  concern- 
ing the  title  of  land  called  Shawwamett  and  Patuxitt,  and  proteccon  of  the 
English  and  Indians  there,  acording  to  our  engagements,  repajring  all  private 
injurjes,  acordinge  to  law  and  justice. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  power  of  the  whole  Courte  shall  continew  with 
those  that  remajne  behinde,  to  agree  of  instruccons  for  the  coiuissione''',  viz., 
Capt  Atherton  &  Capt  Lusher,  in  the  buisenes  of  Plimouth,  touching  Patuxit 
&  Shawwamett,  as  also  to  perfect  and  conclude  the  adjournement  of  tliis  Courte 
to  the  IS""  of  this  ^sent  4""  month,  1650. 


16 


THE    RECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


1650. 


1  June. 

Secretarj'S 
oath. 


AVhereas  yow,  E:  E,:,  are  chosen  secretary  to  the  Gennerall  Courte,  and 
are  to  record  and  keepe  all  the  lawes  and  acts  to  be  passed  by  the  same,  as 
also  the  acts  of  the  couiissioners  and  counsell  of  the  comonwealth,  that  shall 
be  coiuitted  to  yo'",  yo"  doe  heere  s-\veare  by  the  livlnge  God  that  yow  vill 
faithfully  and  carefully  doe  the  same,  according  to  your  vtmost  skill  and  abil- 
litye  ;  and  farther,  observe  the  severall  orders  of  Courte  that  hath  reference  to 
your  place  and  implojment  for  the  entring  of  petitions  and  carefuU  keeping 
all  records  formerly  passed  that  shall  be  coinitted  to  yow,  and  that  yow  will 
not,  directly  &  indirectly,  imparte  or  make  knoune  any  of  the  private  coun- 
sells,  debates,  speaches,  or  agreements  which  shall,  by  the  ISIagis'*  or  any  of 
them,  be  vttered  or  spoken  in  any  of  their  meetings  when  yow  shall  be  pres- 
ent, (except  in  such  cases  or  wajes  as  your  place  requireth,)  but  shall  be  faith- 
full  to  the  sajd  Courte  therein,  as  in  your  conscience,  and  according  to  the 
duty  of  yo''  place,  yow  are  bound. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  letter's  be  writt  to  W"  Arnold,  W™  Feild,  W">  Har- 
ris, Nathaniell  Dickins,  ]\I''  Weekes,  suitable  to  the  origiuall  letters  passed 
this  Courte. 

The  Courte  is  adjourned  to  the  njneteenth  day  of  tliis  June,  1650,  at 
eight  of  the  clocke  in  the  morning. 


[*14.] 

18  June. 


*Att  another  Session   of  the   Generall   Court  of  Elections,  held  at 
Boston,  the  18"'  of  June,  1650. 


CAPT:  HUMPHRY  ATHERTON  and  Cap?  Eleazer  Lusher,  couiis- 
sioners appointed  by  this  Court  to  treat  w"»  and  conclud  w"'  the 
Generall  Court  of  Plimouth  jurisdiccon,  as  in  their  comissiou  and  acording 
thereto,  brought  this  as  their  retourne. 


June  7,  1650. 
The  Generall  Eorasmiich  as  there  hath  binn  for  some  long  time  past  some  qua^stion 

ourhrrsi>rn™"  depending  betwixt  the  jurisdiccons  of  the  Massatusetts  and  New  Plimouth, 
Eon  of  Shauwa-  couceminge  a  certaine  tract  or  tracts  of  land,  called  Shauwamett  and  Patuxit, 

met  &  Patuxit  o  j  ^  >  , 

to  the  Massa-  and  some  places  thereabouts,  and  that  it  hath  pleased  the  honnored  Court  of 
the  Massachusetts  to  graunt  a  coriiission,  vnder  the  hand  and  scale  of  the  sajd 
Court,  vnto  Capt  Humphry  Atherton  and  Cap?  Eleazur  Lusher,  enabling  and 
investing  them  w""  full  power  and  authoritje  to  treate,  consult,  and  determine, 
together  w^i^  tlie  Court  of  Plimouth,  aforesajd,  in  all  cases  M'hatsoeuer  doe  or 


18  June. 


THE    MAS.SACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  17 

may  concernc  the  tracts  of  land  before  specif3'ecl,  the  Gencrall  Courte  of  1  (5  5  0. 
Plimouth,  having  in  consideration  of  the  prasmisses,  as  also  for  the  preserving 
of  mutuall  love,  friendship,  and  amitje  w"'  their  neighbo''s  of  Massachusetts, 
having  chosen  ami  deputed  M''  William  Bradford,  GoUno',  M"^  Thomas  Prince, 
^I''  William  Colljer,  Assistants,  and  M"'  John  Howland,  M'  Thomas  Democke, 
M''  James  Cudworth,  and  M"'  Josiah  Winslow,  ffreemen,  as  a  coiiiittee  of  the 
sajdc  Courte,  and  authorising  and  enabling  them  w"'  full  power  for  them 
and  in  there  behalf  likewise  to  debate,  resolve,  and  fully  to  determine, 
together  w""  the  aforesajd  coiiiissioners  of  the  jNIassachusetts,  all  and  cuery  of 
the  cases  or  qua;stions  about  or  concerning  the  land  aforesajd,  which  sajd 
coinittee,  vpon  dew  consideration,  as  aforesaid,  doth  resolve,  conclude,  and 
determine,  as  followeth,  viz.  :  — 

That  they  doe  fully  and  foreuer  relinquish  and  yeild  vp  vnto  the  gouern- 
ment  of  the  Massachusetts,  aforesajd,  all  the  right,  title,  or  clajme  whatsoeuer 
the  sajd  gouernment  or  jurisdiccon  of  Plimouth  have,  or  might  have  had,  any 
way  or  by  any  meanes  whatsoeuer,  vnto  that  whole  tract  or  tracts  of  land 
knowne  by  the  name  of  Shawwamett  and  Patuxitt,  aforesajd,  being  such  as 
are  or  were  the  just  rights  of  Pumham  and  Soconoco,  or  either  of  them,  at 
that  time,  when  the  sajd  sachems  subjected  themselves  and  their  lands  to  the 
jurisdiccon  of  the  Massachusetts,  aforesajd,  their  sajd  rights  being  or  to  be 
cleered,  acording  to  evidence  and  aparant  demonstracon.  And  wee,  the  sajd 
comittee,  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  doe  in  like  manner  relinquish  vnto  the 
jiu'isdiccon  of  the  Massachusetts  all  oar  rights,  claime,  or  title  vnto  the  lands 
justly  and  lawfully  possessed  by  William  Arnold  and  Eobert  Coale,  and  such 
of  the  other  English  as  at  that  time,  together  w"*  themselves,  did  in  like 
manner  subject  to  the  JNIassachusetts  as  aforesajd,  provided  that  this  shall  in 
no  sorte  hinder  or  prejudjce  the  clue  accomplishment  of  the  order  of  the 
honnored  coiiiittee  of  Parliament  in  any  other  or  ^  case  therein  contajned  ;  and 
also,  provided  alwajes  that  the  bounds  of  these  aforesajd  lands  shall  not 
extend  farther  towards  Cowissett  then  the  true  knoune  and  approoved  limitts 
of  the  lands  of  Pumham  did  extend  at  the  time  of  their  subjecting  to  the 
jurisdiccon  of  the  Massachusetts  as  aforesajd ;  and  also  farther,  w'''  this  pro- 
viso and  condicon,  that  what  lands  soeuer  have  bene  already  or  heerafter 
maybe  made  to  appeare  to  belong  to  the  toune  or  inhabitants  of  Providence 
vnto  this  day  by  any  just  title,  shall  not  be  *encluded  in  this  relinquishment  [  15.] 
above  spccifyed,  but  shall  notw^'standing  remajne  and  wholy  belong  to  the 
inhabitants  of  Providence,  freely  to  enjoy  as  formerly  they  have  donne ;  and 
also  that  this  jurisdiccon  of  Plimouth  be  not  in  anytliing  heereby  putt  to  more 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  3 


18 


THE   RECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


1650. 

■ — ^ — ^ 

18  June. 


Ans^  to  the  pe- 
ticoii  of  James 
Pen,  James 
Johnson,  & 
Peeter  Oliuer 
conce'  Nico. 
Willis  wUl, 
Marshalls  & 
dep'  m'shalls 
power  to  re- 
quire aide  in 
the  execution, 
of  their  office 
as  constables 
hath. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Samuell 
Haughs  pe- 
ticon. 

19  June,  1650. 
Order  for  y® 
coinission'^s 
requiring  jipor- 
oonalle  part  of 
the  chardges 
for  our  agent 
of  the  rest  of 
ye  coUonjes. 

Ans'  to  M' 
MaQicks  pe- 
ticon,  &  75" 
abated  him. 


Comissiou's  for 
Norfolke. 


trouble  or  chardge  then  any  other  of  the  two  confoederate  jiirisdiccons,  viz., 
Conecticott  and  Neuhayen.  WILLIAM  BRADFORD, 

TH°  PRINCE, 
W"  COLLIER, 
JOHN  HOWLAND, 
THOMAS  DIMOCK, 
JAMES  CUDWORTH, 
JOSIAS  WINSLOWE. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  James  Pen,  James  Johnson,  and  Peter  Oliuer, 
the  Court  graunts  their  request,  viz.,  power  of  administracon  to  the  estate  of 
Niolas  WiUis,  late  of  Boston,  respecting  the  will  of  the  sajd  Nicolas  Willis, 
they  bringing  in  an  inveutorje  of  the  estate  to  the  next  County  Court. 

Whereas  the  seuerall  marshalls  and  their  deputjes  of  the  seuerall  countjes 
in  the  execution  of  their  office,  being  generall  officers,  have  often  times  neede 
of  helpe  of  others,  when  they  are  to  serve  attachments  and  executions  vpon 
vnruly  and  disobedient  persons,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that  they  and  every 
of  them  have,  and  shall  have,  the  same  power  to  enjoyne  and  chardge  any 
person  they  shall  see  meete  to  vse  for  such  their  helpe  and  assistance  to  ajde 
them  therein  as  euery  counstable  hath;  and  whosoeuer  shall  refuse  or  not 
yeild  their  obedjence  thereto  shall  incurr  the  same  penalty  that  those  doe,  or 
should  doe,  that  refuse  to  aide  any  constable  in  his  office. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  M"^  Samuell  Haugh,  the  Court  graunts  his 
request,  and  appoint  Cap?  Simon  Willard  and  Sargeant  Blood  to  lay  out  the 
fower  hundred  ac''s  in  the  place  desired. 

Itt  is  ordered,  and  by  this  Court  enacted,  that  the  coiiiissioners  for  the 
Vnited  Collonjes,  at  their  next  meeting,  shall  require  a  proporconable  part  of 
the  chardges  exspended  by  the  agent  for  this  country,  M''  Edward  Winslowe, 
according  to  the  profitts  accrued,  and  that  is  expected  to  acrew,  vnto  the 
countrje  in  generall,  acording  to  the  eequitje  of  the  case,  and  to  make  provicon 
for  the  payment  thereof. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  M"'  Samuell  Mauericke,  fFor  the  remittment  or 
mittigacon  of  his  fine  of  one  hundred  and  ffiffty  pounds,  formerly  imposed  on 
him  by  this  Court,  the  Court  graunts  him  the  abatement  of  the  one  halfe  of 
that  fine,  which  is  seventy  five  pounds. 

Richard  Bellingham,  Esq>,  w"^  Captaine  Wiggin,  &  M"^  Robert  Cleoments, 
M"^  Christopher  Batt,  and  Left  Robt  Pike,  are  appointed  as  coiiiissioners  w* 
the  sajd  magistrates  to  sett  &  keepe  the  County  Courts  in  Norfolk  for  the 
yeere  ensewing. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  19 

In  ans' to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Haverill,  M"' Robert  Cleoraents  1G50. 
is,  by  the  authority  of  this  Court,  appointed  and  impowred  to  give  the  oath    *^       '       ' 

„„,,,.  19  June. 

01  nucility.  -,  „, 

^  M'  Cleoments 

*Itt  is  ordered  by  the  authority  of  this  Court,  that  it  shallbe  in  the  power  ^omission. 
of  any  one  magistrate  to  give  vrarrant  vnto  the  seucrall  counstables  of  Boston,       L        J 
Charles  Toune,  Roxbiu-y,  and  Dorchester,  to  impresse  fower  sufficjent  service-  Proyji-on  ^f 
able  horses,  w""  fitt  furniture,  for  the  service  of  our  honnored  coinissioners  y' comissioners 

journey. 

and  their  attendants,  at  the  next  meeting  of  the  coniissioners  of  the  collonjes, 
and  the  owners  of  the  said  horses  are  to  be  satisfycd  by  the  Treasurer  out 
of  the  country  rate. 

This  Court,  taking  into  consideracbu  the  proposicon  of  the  coinissioners  Comissioncrs 
of  tlie  Vnited  Collonjes,  in  the  booke,  page   178,  that  whereas  the  occasions  1^^11016  of  " 
of  the  collonjes  doe  sometimes  require  the  meeting  and  consultacons  of  the  thcii- meetings. 
coinissioners  before  the  ordinary  time  appointed  by  the  artickles  of  confocder- 
ation,  in  the  seventh  month,  and  so  that  meeting  may  convenjently  be  spared, 
doe  therefore  heereby  order,  that  henceforth  it  shallbe  left  to  the  libertje  of  the 
coinission"  for  the  time  being  to  order  the  time  of  their  meetings  as  the  oc- 
casions of  the  collonjes  may  require,  and  so  forbeare  the  ordinary  meetings  in 
Scptembei",  as  they  shall  see  cawse,  provided  there  be  no  occasionall  meeting 
in  the  summer  before  September  then  the  yeerely  meeting,  to  be  held  as  in  the 
artickles  of  confcederacon. 

Whereas  a  certaine  tract  or  tracts  of  land,  called  Shawwamett  and  Patuxit,  shauwamett 
belongs  to  this  jurisdiccon,  and  is  not  yett  brought  to  be  w"'in  the  bounds  f",  ".  ""'" 
of  any  countje,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that  Shawwamett  and  Patuxit  shall  be  ""=  county  of 

Suffolke. 

accompted  from  henceforth  as  belonging  to  the  county  of  Suffolke. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Humphry  Atherton,  in  cousideracon  of  the  good  500  ackers  gted 
services  he  hath  donne  at  seuerall  times  for  the  country,  shall  have  a  farme  of  °    "'' 

•'  '  ton  as  a  gra- 

five  hundred  ackers  of  land  graunted  him,  to  be  lajd  out  when  he  shall  tender  '"''y  ^"^  •''^ 

service. 

a  convenient  place,  that  is  not  already  graunted,  so  it  hinder  not  a  village,  (and 
this  as  the  Courts  thankfuU  acceptance  thereof) 

For  explanacbn  and  aditlon  of  the  lawe,  title  Profane  Swearing,  itt  is  Posnaity  for 
ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  if  any  person  shall  |.  "ursine"" 
sweare  more  oathes  then  one  at  a  time,  before  he  remoove  out  of  the  roome  or 
company  where  he  so  sweares,  he  shall  then  pay  the  some  of  twenty  shillings : 
the  like  poenalty  shallbe  inflicted  for  profane  and  wicked  cursing  of  any  person 
or  other  creature,  and  for  the  multiplying  the  same,  as  is  appointed  for  profane 
swearing ;  and  in  case  any  person,  so  offending  by  multiplying  oathes  or 
cursing,  shall  not  pay  his    or    then*  fines  forthw"",  they  shall  be  whipt  or 


20  THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1650.      comitted  to  prison,  till  they  shall  pay  the  same  at  the  discretion  of  the  Court 
or  magistrate  that  shall  have  cognizance  thereof. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  the  authority  of  this  Court,  that  Thomas  Dudley,  Es^, 
our  houno^'ed  GoQn"^,  Richard  Bellinghm,  Es^,  INI''  Joseph  Hills,  Capt  Ham- 

structions  for 

the  comis-        phry  Atherton,  and  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  or  any  fower  of  them,  shall  be  a 
sion's.  coiiiittee  to  drawe  vp  instructions  for  our  honnored  coiuissiouers,  for  their  direc- 

tions against  the  time  when  the  coinissioners  of  all  the  collonjes  shall  meete  ; 
and  this  coinittee  is  to  meete  vpon  timely  notice  given  them  from  the  Goiin'". 
[*17.]  *As  an  adition  to  the  lawe,  title  Gaming,  1646, 1647,  itt  is  ordered  by  this 

Poenalty  for      Gourtc  and  the  authoritie  thereof,  that  bowling,  or  any  other  play  or  game,  in 

gamesters.  •'  o  .<  j.      ./  o 

or  about  howses  of  coinon  intertainment,  shallbe,  and  heereby  is,  prohibited, 
vnder  the  same  poenalty  to  any  person  offending  heerein  as  is  provided  for  in 
the  aforesaid  lawe  against  players  at  shovelboard ;  nor  shall  any  person  be  an 
abetter  to  any  kind  of  gaming,  on  the  same  pccnalty  provided  for  against  play- 
ing for  money  or  raoneyworth,  prohibited  in  the  sajd  lawcs. 
Straungers  lib-  Whereas  oftentimes  it  comes  to  passe  that  stranngers  coming  amongst  vs 

ertr  to  trye  ac-  i  i    •  •  •  c  1 1  •  r\  e 

coiis  one  w't     have  suudajne  occasions  to  trye  actions  oi  seuerall  natures  m  our  Courts  ot 

another,  in  any  j,jg(.;(,g^  ^^^\  j,j  respect  it  is  very  chardgeable  to  the  partjes,  and  troublesome  to 

the  countrje  to  call  speciall  Courts  for  the  determinacon  of  such  cases,  itt  is 

ordered  by  this  Court  and  authoritje  thereof,  that  from  henceforth  it  shallbe  in 

the  liberty  of  any  stranngers,  vjion  legall  suiuoiis,  to  enter  any  action  against 

any  person  or  pcrsoii,  not  residing  or  inhabiting  amongst  vs,  in  any  Court 

w^'iii  this  jiirisdiccon.. 

M'  Barthoi-  "WHiereas  M"^  "W™  Bartholmew,  of  Ipswich,  and  M"^  Henry  Bartholmew, 

6"  to  be  repaid   ^^  Salem,  have  teiidrcd  themselves  to  suply  ffiffty  shillings  apeece  in  money 

them,  &c.         towards  the  chardge  of  our  coinissioners  of  the  collonjes,  itt  is  ordered  by  this 

Courte,  that  M"'  W"  and  M''  Henry  Bartholmew  shallbe  pajd  the  same  out 

of  the  next  country  rate  in  each  toune  of  the  best  of  the  pay,  w"'  allowance  of 

sixepence  vpon  euery  five  shillings  for  forbearance  and  other  inconvenicncjes, 

vnlesse  it  be  pajd  in  money  in  Nouember  next. 

Power  to  the  Itt  is  ordered,  and  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Court  enacted,  that  the  Magis- 

next  at  Boston  trates  of  the  next  Countje  Court,  to  be  held  at  Boston  in  July  next,  shallbe, 

to  treat  wi-  any  ^^^  heereby  are,  empowred  w'l"  ample  power  and  authority  to  treat  w*  and 

of  M' Gortons  J  >  i  i         1  J 

company.  conclude  w"^  such  of  ]\I'  Gortons  company  as  shall  come  therevnto,  (if  they 
are  not  satisfyed  that  Shauwainett  and  Patuxit  are  now  justly  and  vndoubtedly 
w'^'in  our  jurisdiccon,)  of  nominating  meet  and  indiffirent  judges  and  a  jury, 
to  heare  and  determine  the  points  of  difference  betweene  them  and  ourselves 
in  that  respect,  that  so  mutuall  peace  and  love  maybe  preserved  amongst  vs. 
Whereas   M'^  Winslow,  by  his   letter,  informes  that  he  borrowed,  two 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  21 

yeere  since,  of  M'  Willoughby,  Cap?  Robert  Harding,  &  M'  Frauncis  Norton,      1  G  5  0. 
of  each  of  them  five  pounds,  and  of  M"^  Ezckiah  Vsher  fForty  shillings,  for    ^"^     *     "^ 
snplying  himself  to  carry  on  the  publicke  occasions,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  „. 

^    ^      ^  J  r  7  y  Ircasurcr  to 

Treasurer,  out  of  this  next  levy,  shall  pay  vnto  them,  viz.,  to  each  of  them  that  p^yM'Wiiiow- 

by,  &c,  outofy 

lent  five  2)ouuds  seven  pounds,  and  to  M'  Ezekiah  Vsher  ffiffty  sixe  shillings,  next  levy  the 
Whereas  Thomas  Young,  a  seaman,  now  in  Boston,  hath  served  Capt  "5°*^^^  "^^  ' 
Barnabe  Standfast,  master  of  a  shipp  now  before  Boston,  w""  an  attachment  to  Liberty  given 
apeai-e  at  the  next  Court  held  at  Salem,  in  an  action  of  the  case,  for  wages  dew   °^  surcapt  "^ 
vnto  liim,  w"^held  by  the  said  master,  itt  is  ordered  by  the  authoritie  of  this  Standfast  at 

Salem. 

Coiut,  that  the  sajd  master  of  the  ship  shall  aus'^  the  action  at  Salem  Court 
afforesajd,  acordiug  to  the  attachment,  any  lawc  or  customc  to  the  contrary 
notw^standing. 

*Whereas  in  the  first  session  of  this  Court,  vpon  the  petition  of  sundiy  on  [*  18.] 
the  behalf  of  the  schoole  of  Dochester,  in  relation  to  the  title  of  the  iland  called  ^'^^' '"  ^°''' 

Chester  peticon 

Thompsons  Iland,  itt  was  ordered,  that  M"'  John  Thompson  should  be  sviiioncd  respecting 

,      ,  T         1  •  /•     1  1  •      ^  •  Thompsons 

or  attacncct  to  attend  a  nearmg  01  the   case  at  this  psent  session,  yett  not  n.-,j_ 
knowing  the  same  was  served,on  their  request   itt  is  heereby  ordered,  that  at- 
tachment shall  be  graunted  to  bind  the  sajd  M''  Thompson  to  attend  a  hearing 
of  the  case  at  the  next  sessions  of  this  Coiut. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  j)ay  vnto  the  servants  of  Hugh  GuUi-  Gratuity  to  the 

-         ,     .  ,  p     -i       r~\  1  'IT  servants  of 

son,  as  a  gratmty  lor  their  attendance  on  part  01  the  Court,  twenty  shillings,  ij„j|j  howses. 
and  to  the  servants  of  W™  Phillips,  for  their  attendance  on  the  other  part  of 
the  Court,  tenu  shillings. 

Itt  is   ordered,  that  M"^  Mathewes  shall  have  an  optunity,  viz.,  twenty  Time  allowed 
eighth  of  this  instant  June,  at  Boston,  at  "W"  Phillips  howse,  at  eight  of  the  ^^   -^  ^^^^^_ 
clock  in   the  morning,  to  give  satisfaccou  for  what  he  formerly  deliuered,  as  ''''«'-■<">.  *>=• 
erronious,  wcake,  &<?,  to  the  elders  of  Boston,  Charles  Toune,  Roxbury,  and 
Dorchester,  w"'  such  of  the  Magis"*  as  shall  please  to  be  then  present,  (if  he  can.) 

"Whereas  the  French,  Dutch,  and  other  fforaigne  nations  doe  ordjnarily  22  June, 
trade  gunns,  pouder,  shott,  &c,  w"'  the  Indjans,  to  our  great  p>judice,  and  ^°°"''"''p°'^ 
strengthning  and  anuimating  the  Indjans   against  vs,  as   by  dujly  experience  &c,  to  trade 

w'^  the  Xndifirs 

wee  finde,  and  whereas  the  aforesajd  French,  Dutch,  &(3,  doe  prohibite  all  i^o^^  j^^isdic- 
trade  w""  the  Indjans  w'l'in  their  respective  jurisdiccons,  vnder  penalty  of  con-  '^°"- 
fiscation,  &6,  itt  is  therefore  hereby  ordered,  that  after  due  pubHcation  thereof, 
it  shall  not  be  lawful!  for  any  Frenchman,  Dutchman,  or  person  of  any  other 
forraigne  nation  whatsoeuer,  or  any  English  living  amongst  them,  or  vnder 
them,  or  any  of  them,  to  trade  w"'  any  Indjan  or  Indjans  w"'in  the  Umitts  of 
our  jurisdiccbn,  either  directly  or  indirectly,  by  themselves  or  others,  vnder 
poenalty  of  confiscation  of  all  such  goods    and  vessells  as   shallbe   found  so 


22  June. 


22  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  50.  tradeing,  or  the  dew  vallcw  thereof,  vpon  just  proofFe  of  any  goods  or  vessells 
so  tradeing  or  traded  ;  and  it  shallbe  hiwfuU  for  any  person  or  jjersons  inhabit- 
ing w"'in  this  jurisdiccon  to  make  seizure  of  any  such  goods  or  vessells  tradeing 
w"'  the  Indjans,  as  by  this  lawe  is  prohibited,  one  halfe  whereof  shallbe  to 
the  propper  vse  and  benefitt  of  the  party  seizing,  and  the  other  halfe  to  the 
publicke. 
Ans'  to  John  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  John  Prescott,  itt  is  ordered,  that  if  the  sajd 

g^jjj  John  Prescott  shall  not,  before  the  end  of  the  next  sessions  of  this  Courte, 

make  it  sufficjently  appeare  that  Nashaway  is  a  fitt  place  for  a  plantacon,  so  as 
a  ministry  may  be  erected  and  niaintajned  there,  otherwise  the  parties  there  in- 
habiting shallbe  called  there  hence,  and  not  suffered  to  live  w^'out  the  meanes 
any  longer. 
[*19.]  *Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authority  thereof,  that  henceforth 

Recording  of     ^ny  graunt,  sale,  bargaine,  or  mortgage  of  howses,  lands,  rents,  or  other  haere- 

lands  in  y"  _ 

county  where  dittaments,  recorded  by  the  recorder  of  that  shire  in  which  such  howses,  lands, 
rents,  or  hacridittaments  are,  shallbe  sufhcjent  security  vnto  the  purchaser  or 
grauntee  w"'out  any  farther  certifying  vnto  the  recorder  or  secretary  for  the 
Generall  Court,  and  that  clawse  in  the  close  of  the  printed  lawes,  title  Con- 
veyances, Fraudulent,  page  14,  requiring  the  same,  is  heereby  repealed. 
Thcbooke  Forasmuch  as  the  Booke  of  Discipline  was  to  be  coiiiended  by  order  of 

piine  comended  ^^^  Generall  Court  to  the  seuerall  chiuxhes  of  this  jurisdiccon,  to  be  by  them 
to  y«  churches    considered,  and  their  consent  or  dissent  to  be  retourned  to  this  Generall  Court 

cousideraco. 

of  Eleccons,  concerning  the  perticulars  therein  expressed,  and  forasmuch 
as  it  is  sajd  that  some  of  the  churches  was  ignorant  of  the  sajd  order,  and 
therefore  little  hath  binn  donne  in  that  perticular,  this  Court  therefore  (tak- 
ing into  consideration  how  necessary  the  perfecting  of  that  worke  willbe,  and 
how  much  it  will  tend  to  Gods  glorje  and  peace  of  theise  churches)  doe  heere- 
by order,  that  the  sajd  booke  be  deuly  considered  of  all  the  sajd  churches 
w"Hn  this  pattent,  and  that  they,  w^'out  faile,  will  retourne  their  thoughts 
and  judgments,  touching  the  perticulars  thereof,  to  the  next  session  of  this 
Court,  to  the  end  that  the  sajd  worke  maybe  perfected  to  Gods  prajse  ;  and 
that  a  coppie  of  this  be  forthw"^  sent  to  euery  one  of  the  sajd  churches.  And 
it  is  further  heereby  desiied  that  euery  church  will,  by  the  first  opertunitje, 
take  order  for  the  procuring  of  that  booke,  published  by  the  synod,  at  London, 
concerning  the  doctrine  of  the  gospell,  that  the  churches  may  also  consider  of 
that  booke  also  assoone  as  they  can  be  gotten. 
Order  for  y«  Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  henceforth 

u  '    ,    ^  '  the  secretary  for  the  Generall  Court  shall,  w*in  two  months  after  the  end  of 

scribe  y  lawes.  -^  ' 

euery  sessions,  send  vnto  the  clarke  of  euery  Shire  Court,  as  also  vnto  the 


THE    MASSACIIUSETTrf    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND,  23 

present  or  late  deputies  of  each  toune,  or  to  the  counstable  where  no  deputje      165  0. 

is,  a  coppie  of  all  generall  orders  made  in  each  Court,  for  which  he  shall  re-    *~"    ">       ^ 

ceave  of  the  Treasurer,  for  eueiy  such  coppie,  after  the  rate  of  eight  pence  p 

page,  which  the  Treasurer  shall  chardge  vpon  each  toune,  together  w""  their 

countrje  rate  from  time  to  time,  viz.,  for  the  coppies  sent  vnto  the  perticular 

tounes  ;  and  it  is  farther  ordered  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that  the  deputjes, 

or  counstable  of  each  towne  where  no  deputie  is,  shall  cawse  the  same  to  be 

audibly  read  in  a  publicke  toune  meeting,  warned  (by  the  counstable  of  each 

toune)  w"'in  tenne  dayes  after  their  receipt  thereof,  on  poenalty  of  five  pounds 

vpon  any  deputy  or  counstable  for  neglect  of  their  respective  dutjes  ;  and  it  is 

farther  ordered  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that  such  reading  thereof,  in  any 

shire  or  markett  toune  in  each  shire,  shallbe  a  sufficjent  publication  thereof 

from  time  to  time ;  provided  also  that  the  Treasurer  shall  have  a  coppie  w^out 

payment  from  time  to  time. 

In  ans'  to  the  qusestion,  viz.,  whether  by  that  clause  of  the  law  intituled  Ans'to  aques- 
Inkeepers,  a  private  person,  (not  a  comon,  or  publicke,  or  licensed  seller  of  ke°p"/suffrini! 
strong  waters,)  entertajning  three  or  fewer  psons  into  his  howse,  and  letting  t'pi'"g  strong 

water. 

them  there  drincke  a  pinte  or  two  of  strong  waters,  (whereby  one  of  them  is 
drimcke,)  and  receave  money  for  it,  whether  such  a  carriage  is,  acording  to  the 
intent  of  that  lawe,  a  breach  thereof,  and  acordingly  liable  to  the  poenalty 
therein  menconed.  As  the  case  is  heere  stated,  the  Court  determines  it  is  a 
breach  of  the  first  section  of  that  lawe,  and  that  the  penaltje  maybe  taken 
acording  to  what  is  therein  expressed. 

•Whereas  wee  are  credibly  informed  that  great  mischeifes  and  outrages       [*20.] 
have  binn  wrought  in  other  plantacons  in  America  by  coinanders,  and  souldjers  ^""^  prevention 

.  .  .        .  of  outrages. 

of  seuerall  qualitjes,  and  other  straingers  issumg  out  of  other  parts,  vsiu-ping 
power  of  goQnement  ouer  them,  plundering  of  their  estates,  taking  -s'p  armes, 
and  making  great  divisions  amongst  the  inhabitants  where  they  have  come,  to 
prevent  the  like  mischeife  in  this  jurisdiccon,  this  Court  doth  order,  and  it  is 
heereby  enacted,  that  henceforward  all  straingers,  of  what  qualitje  soeuer,  above 
the  age  of  sixteene  yeeres,  ariving  heere  in  any  portes  or  parts  of  this  jurisdiccon 
in  any  shipp  or  vessell,  shall  imediately  be  brought  before  the  Goiino'',  Dep' 
GoQno'',  or  two  other  magistrates,  by  the  master  or  mate  of  the  sajd  shipps  or  ves- 
sells,  vpon  the  poenalty  of  twenty  pounds  ;  for  default  thereof,  there  to  give  an 
accompt  of  their  occasions  and  busines  in  this  countrje,  whereby  satisfaccon  may- 
be given  to  this  coinonwealth,  and  order  taken  w*  such  straingers  as  the  sajd 
GoQn"",  Depu*  GoQno',  two  Assistants,  or  the  next  Coimtje  Court  shall  see 
meete ;  and  that  the  lawe  for  intertajning  of  straingers  be  strictly  putt  in 
execution,  and  this  order  to  be  posted  vp  vpon  the  seuerall  meetinghouses 


22  June. 


24  THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  G  50.  cloores,  or  postes,  or  other  publicke  places  in  the  port  tonnes  of  this  jurisdic- 
con.  And  it  is  ordered,  that  the  capt  of  the  Castle  shall  make  knoune  this 
order  to  euery  shippe  or  vessell  as  it  passeth  by,  and  the  counstables  of  euery 
port  toune  shall  indeavor  to  doe  the  like  to  such  shipps  or  vessells  before  they 
land  their  passengers  ;  and  that  a  true  record  be  kept  of  all  the  names  of  such 
straingers,  and  their  qualities,  by  the  clarks  of  the  writts,  who  shall  have  the 
names  given  them  by  the  sajd  GoQn''  or  Magistrates,  to  be  retourned  to  the 
next  jmediate  sessions  of  the  Generall  Court.  This  to  continew  and  be  in 
force  till  the  next  session. 
M"  Tilly,  mid-  In  answer  to  the  petition  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  the  toune  of  Boston, 

ffor  the  releasement  and  enlardgement  of  M"^^  Tilly,  midwife,  the  Court  doth 
answeare,  that  it  is  no  smale  greife  vnto  them  to  be  so  often  pressed,  both  in 
the  generall  and  particular  Courts,  by  so  many  woemen  heretofore,  and  now 
also  by  so  many  men,  being  such  as  deserve  so  great  respect  from  them,  in  a 
♦  cawse  which  they  cannot  gratifje  them  in  without  the  vilatlon  of  their  con- 
sciences, and  that  authoritje  the  countrje  hath  betrusted  them  withall,  so  that 
they  might  answer  as  Solomon  did  liis  mother,  whom  he  was  loath  to  do  any 
thing :  Aske  for  M'^  Tilly  the  kingdome  also  ;  for  the  petictiners  should  doe 
well  to  consider  that,  notwithstanding  the  censure  past  vppon  hir,  (which 
they,  vppon  the  full  evidence  they  had  then,  did,  and  yett  doe,  thinke  to  be 
just,  yett,  being  willing  (out  of  the  respect  they  beare  to  the  former  pe- 
ticoners)  to  connjve  at  hir  disobedjence,  so  farr  as  they  might,  without  betray- 
ing all  authoritje  into  hir  bauds,  have  hitherto  permitted  hir  to  goe  whether 
shee  pleased,  doe  what  she  listed,  and  speake  what  she  would,  without  further 
qufestioning  of  hir  or  those  who  were  bound  to  retourne  hir  to  prison,  where- 
by she  either  was,  or  might  have  binn,  as  usefull  in  her  midwivery  as  before 
hir  censure ;  but  it  plainely  appeares,  by  hir  carriage  and  speeches,  and  hir 
vrging  others  thus  still  to  petition  for  hir,  that  nothing  but  a  compleate  vic- 
tory oner  magistracy  will  satisfy  hir  excessive  pride,  which  they  desire  maybe 
weighed  by  the  peticoners  and  others  in  an  equall  ballance,  their  being  as 
much  neede  to  vphold  magistracy  in  their  aiithoritye  as  M"^^  Tilly  in  hir  mid- 
[*21.1  wivery ;  that  soe  further  imp  *iniportunity  maybe  forborne,  and  that  both  magis- 
trates may  serve  God  and  the  countrje  without  discouradgement  in  their 
places,  and  M"  Tillyes  freinds  may  at  length  be  pacifjed ;  and  whereas  some 
of  the  magistrates  have  bin  informed  that  there  be  some  that  thinke  and 
speake  that  M''*  Tilly  was  not  justly  fined  and  imprisoned  by  the  magis'^,  if 
any  such  will  shew  themselves  therein,  the  magist*  are  ready  to  make  answer 
thereto. 

In  answer  to  the  petic6n  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  the  toune  of  Dorchester, 


22  June. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  26 

in  the  behalfe  of  M"'"  Tillcy,  for  hir  rcleasement  and  cnlardgement,  tlie  Courte      1  G  5  0. 
doth  order,  that  the  same  answer  Avhich  they  gave  to  Boston  peticon  shallbc 
given  to  this  peticon,  being  both  of  one  nature. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  acknowledgement  of  Bozoune  Allen  (in  respect 
of  the  offence  he  gave  concerning  our  honnored  Gouerno'')  should  be  accepted 
of,  being  satisfactory. 

Whereas  I,  Bozoune  Allen,  am  chardged  to  have  vttered  some  words  or    25  3 :  1650. 
expressions  vnto  the  rightwofppff '  Thomas  Dudly,  Escp,  late  Dcp'  Gouerno^  BozouneAUens 

.  J.  JT  :■  acknowledge 

and  now  Gouerno'',  of  tlie  jurisdiccon  of  the  Massatusetts,  in  the  last  Countjc  ment. 

Courte  for  Suffolkc,  tending  to  his  reproach,  viz.,  that  something  Avhich  he 
then  spake  or  related,  touching  some  agitation  of  M'^  Cotton  and  M"^  Wilson, 
at  Weimouth,  in  relation  to  some  of  Hingham,  was  false,  I  desire,  vnder  fa- 
vour, humbly  to  expresse  myselfe  as  foUoweth :  — 

First,  that  I  doe  not  remember  that  I  did  so  speake  ;  but  inasmuch  as  the 
magistrates  are  informed  that  I  did  then  and  there  so  speake,  I  am  willing 
rather  to  suspect  then  to  justify  myselfe,  accoumpting  and  acknowledging  it 
to  be  very  sinfull,  cvill,  and  vnsufferable  for  any  to  asperse  or  reflect  any 
blemish  vpon  any  member  of  any  Courte  of  justice,  and  much  more  to  be 
clonne  by  me,  or  any  soe  ingaged  or  interesscd  in  vpholding  the  honnor  of  the 
countrje  and  principall  pillars  thereof,  as  I  accoumpt  myself  to  be,  and  most 
of  all  to  defame  him  whom  I  know  and  acknowledge  to  be,  and  have  bin,  so 
eminently  serviceable  vnto,  and  tender  of,  the  good  of  this  countrje,  and  doe, 
in  very  deed,  accoumpt  it  a  matter  of  greife  to  my  very  soule  that  he  should 
be  reproached  or  the  least  eclipsed  by  any,  and  much  more  that  I  should  be, 
or  aprchended  to  be,  an  occasion  thereof.  Secondly,  I  doe  solemnly  professe 
that  I  neitlier  lune,  nor  then  had,  such  a  thought  in  my  hart,  nor  I  trust  euer 
shall  harbor  such  a  thought ;  as  if  he,  viz.,  our  honnored  Gouerno'',  did,  or 
would,  willingly  speake  or  relate  any  thing  vntrue  or  false  ;  nor  know  I  any 
ground  for  myselfe,  or  any  man,  so  to  conceavc,  much  lesse  to  conclude  or 
afhrme,  concerning  him.  Thirdly,  my  humble  reqiiest  to  this  honnored 
Courte,  and  in  perticular  to  our  honnored  Gouerno'',  is,  that  I  maybe  favor- 
ably construed  according  to  my  vpright  and  sinceere  acknowledgment  and  prot- 
estation, and  that  whatsoeuer  in  any  my  expressions  on  the  occasion  aforesajd 
was  justly  offensive,  in  one  respect  or  other,  maybe  remitted  and  couered  with 
the  mantle  of  love,  which  hopes,  belejves,  and  suffereth  much.  Fowerthly,  for 
vindication  of  our  honnored  Gouerno'^  from  all  appearance  of  rc])roach  by  my 
occasion,  my  humble  rer^ucst  is,  that  this  acknowledgement  maybe  publicquely 
read  before  this  whole  Coiu-te ;  so,  desiring  your  prajers  to  God  for  me,  that  I 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  4 


26 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


16  50.      may  be  more  cii-cumspect  and  inoffensive  in  all  points  for  time  to  come,  I 
humbly  subscribe  myselfe,  willing,  in  all  I  may,  to  serve  and  lionnor  you. 

BOZOUNE   ALLEN. 


22  June. 


The  Courte  is  adjourned  to  the  fElfteeuth  of  October  next,  at  noone. 


[*22.]      *Att  a  third  Session  of  the  Gennerall    Court  of  Eleccons,  held  at 
15  o^"'''<='--  Bodon,  the  15'"  of  October,  1650. 


Horses  to  be 
impressed. 


FORASMUCH  as,  by  sad  experjence,  the  countrjes  most  weighty  and 
necessary  occasions  is  much  neglected  and  retarded  by  reason  that  in 
the  times  of  greatest  neede,  few  or  no  horses  are  to  be  jmpresscd  and  gajned 
for  the  vrgent  pressing  occasions  of  the  countrje,  but  such  as  jileade  exemption 
by  vutue  of  their  being  listed,  (which  this  Courte  is  tender  of  discouradging,) 
yett,  finding  it  of  necessitje  to  take  some  such  course  as  the  countrjes  occasions 
maybe  seasonably  served,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that  from  henceforth  all 
horses  within  this  jurisdiccon  (except  in  the  time  when  they  are  in  the  regi- 
mentall  exercises,  or  in  publicke  service  for  the  countrje)  shallbe  subject  by 
presse  to  serve  the  countrje  in  their  necessary  occasions,  as  other  horses  are ; 
provided,  that  if  any  horse  being  listed  for  service  shall  be  impressed  to  be 
made  vse  of  by  the  countrje,  that  then  eueiy  owner  of  such  horse  so  listed 
shall  have  allowed  him  two  shillings  a  day  ;  but  if  they  are  not  Ksted,  they 
shall  be  allowed  but  one  shilling  sixepence  a  day,  any  lawe,  vsage,  or  custome 
to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje,  that  no  man  shall  strike 
his  ■wife,  nor  any  woman  her  husband,  on  penalty  of  such  fine  not  exceeding 
tenn  pounds  for  one  offence,  or  such  corporall  punnishment  as  the  Shire  Courte 
that  hath  the  examination  thereof  shall  determine ;  and  the  former  lawe,  title 
Woemen,  is  heereby  repealed. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  all  sortes  of  corne  shallbe  pijd  into  the 
y  y  ere  o  covmtry  rate  at  these  prizes  following,  viz. :  wheate  and  barly  at  five  shillings 
p  bushell ;  rye  and  pease  at  fower  shillings  ;  Indjan  at  three  shillings,  mar- 
chantable  ;  and  all  other  things  pajd  into  the  countrje  rate  to  be  vallewed  by 
indifferent  men,  according  to  the  seuerall  prizes  of  all  sortes  of  corne  above- 
mentioned. 

Vppon  information   of  some   inconvenjencjes  accrewed,  and  more  that 


Pcenalty  for 
husbands  or 
wife  striking 
each  other. 


Prizes  of  corne 
y"  yeere  to  tl 
country  rate. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  27 

may  accrcw,   to   seueiall   persons,   in   that    meu    take    themselves  acquitted      1650. 
and  free  from  all  Icgall  obligations  in  case  of  ajjpcarancc  in  courts  according    "        "'    ~^ 
to  the  cxpresse  termes  of  the  bond,  or,  at  most,  if  the  principall  there  stay  till  „    ,    tt   i  d 
verdict  and  judgement  be  given,  -which  if   they  be,   they  may  then  make  ""'  *"  be  re- 

*  leased  till  cxe- 

away  their  estates,  or  absent  their  persons  before  the  twelve  howres  be  expired  cution  be 
for  graunting  execution,  whereby  the  partje  recoucring  may  either  be  de- 
prived of  or  much  daiuaged  in  his  just  rights,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this 
Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  henceforth  all  goods  attached  vppon  any 
action  shall  not  be  released  vppon  the  appearance  of  the  party,  or  judgement 
given,  but  shall  stand  jngaged  vntill  the  judgement  or  the  execution  be 
graunted  vppon  the  sajd  judgement  be  discharged,  nor  shall  any  suerty  or 
suretyes  for  appearance  in  any  Courte  (except  in  capitall  or  *criminall  cases)  be  [*23.] 
released  from  his  oi'  tlieir  bond,  vntill  the  execution  as  aforesajd  be  discharged 
and  satisfjed,  or  the  principall  person  be  surrendred  into  the  hands  of  the 
marshall  or  his  deputy,  who  shall  secure  him  till  the  judgment  be  discharged, 
any  lawe,  custome,  or  ysage  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Whereas  experjence  doth  show  the  inconvenience  of  taking  verball  testi-  All  affidavits  to 

„  ,  „  .  ...,.,.  ,        be  in  w-riting. 

raonjes  m  Lourte,  by  reason  ot  many  impertmencjes  in  their  relations,  so  that 

the  clarkes  cannot  well  make  a  perfect  record  thereof,  and  to  prevent  all  mis- 
takes and  vngrounded  jealousyes  against  the  officers,  bee  it  heereby  enacted  and 
decreed,  that  henceforth  all  testimonjes  shall  be  presented  in  writing  to  the 
Courte,  either  attested  before  a  magistrate,  or  (if  the  party  be  within  tenn 
miles  of  the  Courte)  to  be  then  attested  in  Courte  vjjpon  oath,  and  the  partje 
for  whom  such  wittness  is  brought  shall  pay  to  the  recorder,  for  filing  and  safe 
keeping  of  the  same,  two  pence,  and  for  transcribing  a  coppy  thereof  (when 
it  is  called  for)  sixe  pence  for  euery  page  consisting  of  thirty  lines,  and  so 
proportionably  therevnto.  Further,  it  is  heereby  ordered,  that  the  foreman  of 
euery  jury  shall  faithfully  deliuer  vp  all  such  testimonjes,  or  other  writings 
coinitted  to  them,  vnto  the  recorder,  or  officer  of  the  Court,  when  they  give 
in  their  verdicts,  in  euery  case. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  in  all  actions  of  trespasse,  where  the  pretence  to  any  Partje  bringing 
Courte  of  the  tresjjasse  shallbe  pretended  to  be  above  fforty  shillings,  and  yett,  ^er  ro»'^to  any 
on  the  hearing  thereof,  it  shall  appeare  to  come  under  the  sajd  vallew,  in  all  ^'""'' '°  P^y 

costs. 

such  cases,  the  plaintlffe  shall  loose  his  action,  and  pay  the  defendant  costs. 

Vpi^on  information  of  soundry  inconveniencjes  by  the  suddajne  and  vnex-  Associates,  w" 
pected  adjournement  of  Shiere  Courts,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  to  kccpuCoun- 
authoritje  thereof,  that  annually  vppon  the  day  of  nomination  of  men  for  ma-  '^  ^°"'^^^- 
gistrates  in  euery  tonne,  there  shall  also  be  a  chojce  of  some  nieete  persons  for 
associates  for  each  shiere,  chosen  by  papers  and  pervsed  in  each  toune  meeting, 


15  October. 


28  THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  5  0.  and  those  two  that  have  most  votes  shallbe  signifjed  \Tider  the  cotinstables 
hand,  and  dehuered  vnto  each  person  designed  to  carry  the  votes  for  magis- 
trates vuto  their  shiere  meeting,  who,  so  mett  together,  shall  examine  the  votes 
^  the  seuerall  tonnes,  and  those  two  that  have  most  votes  shall  be  signifjed 
vnder  their  hands,  and  presented  vnto  some  magistrate  in  each  shiere,  or  to 
their  next  Shiere  Court,  by  the  counstables  in  the  towne  where  they  dwell, 
to  take  their  oath  according  to  lawe,  wlxich  sajd  associates  for  each  shiere  so 
cjiosen,  and  sworne  with  one  magistrate,  shall  henceforth  duely  attend,  and 
keepe  all  and  euery  the  sajd  Shiere  Courts,  vppon  the  seuerall  dajes  deter- 
mined by  laAve,  that  so  there  be  no  occasion  of  complajnts  of  that  nature  in 
time  to  come. 
[*24:.]  *Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  euery  pub- 

Order  that        licke  notary  in  this  jurisdiccon  shall  henceforth  stand  chardged,  from  time  to 

states  publicke     .  -ii  r  •ii-i  -nc 

notarjes  ffees.  time,  to  doe  the  perticulars  heereaiter  mentioned,  being  therevnto  required,  for 
the  perticular  ffees  hereafter  expressed,  viz.  :  for  writing  a  procuration,  or 
letter  of  attourney,  twelve  pence. 

For  entring  the  same  at  lardge  in  his  booke,  if  therevnto  required,  twelve 
pence. 

For  coppying  a  bill  of  exchaiidge,  and  for  a  protest,  and  attesting  the 
same  vnder  his  hand,  two  shillings  sixe  pence. 

For  time  necessarily  expended  abroad,  in  travells  or  otherwise,  about 
protests,  beside  writing  and  attesting  vnder  his  hand  as  aforesajd,  after  the 
rate  of  twelve  pence  an  hower. 

For  writing,  recording,  and  attesting  a  cocquett  or  certifficatt,  twelve 
pence. 

For  entring  a  bill  of  exchandge  and  protest  at  lardge  in  his  booke,  one 
shilling  sixe  pence. 

For  a  coppy  of  a  bill  of  exchandge  and  protest,  and  signing  it,  two 
shillings. 

For  searching  and  declaring,  vppon  demand,  any  record  vnder  his  cus- 
tody, three  pence. 

For  all  writings  exceeding  a  page  in  folio,  ouer  and  above  the  former 
ffees,  after  the  rate  of  eight  pence  p  page  for  all  above  one  page  contajning 
thirty  or  thirty  fower  lines,  in  a  page  of  ordinary  sized  paper,  and  eight  or 
tenn  words  in  a  Ijne. 

For  a  coppy  of  any  writing  or  record,  the  same  ffee  as  for  Avriting  and  at- 
testing the  originall  writing  or  record  thereof 

For  the  bare  pervsing  and  attesting  any  kind  of  writing  not  hecreby 
specially  provided  for,  sixe  pence. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  29 

And  it  is  further  ordered  by  the  authoritjc  aforcsnjd,  that  no  such  officer      1  0  50. 
shall   deny  or  delay  any  man   desiring  it  the  x'levf  or  coppy  of  any  record,  or    "        ''       ' 
signing  any  writing,  vppon  tender  of  duo  flees,  as  above  expressed,  on  pocn- 
altje  of  twenty  shillings  for  euery  such  default,  and  liable  to  the  partjc  there' 
by  damnitjed,  by  way  of  action,  as  in  other  cases. 

The  Courte,  having  had  the  sight  of  a  booke  lately  prjnted  vnder  the  Contra  de- 
name  of  William  Pinchon  in  New  England,  Gent,  doe  judge  meete,  first,  that  w"  Hathorne 
a  protest  be  drawen,  fully  and  cleerely,  to  satisfy  all  men  that  this  Courte  is  Si^^^kc  to  y 

'  Dcputjcs,  Jos. 

SO  farr  from  approoving  the  same  as  that  they  doe  vtterly  dislike  it  and  detest  mus.  Henry 

11*  n  1  •     1  rr>    •         1  Bartholomew, 

It  as  erronjous  and  daingeroiis  ;  secondly,  that  it  be  sunicjently  answered  by  Riiiiard  w^ik- 
one  of  the  reuerend  ciders  :   thirdly,  that  the  said  AVilliam  Pinchon,  sent,  be  II' ,    ,"^' 

•  ■"  '  o        J  Holynke, 

suiuoned  to  appeare  before  the  next  Generall  Courte  to  answer  for  the  same ;  Stephen 

Kingsly. 

ffowerthly,  that  the  sajd  booke  now  brought  ouer  be  burnt  by  the  executioner,  ^g  ,g„[  >  jgjg 
or  such  other  as  the  magistrates  shall  appointe,  (the  party  being  willing  to 
doe  it,)  in  the  markett  place  in  Boston,  on  the  morrow  immedjately  after  the 
lecture. 

*The  Generall  Courte,  now  sitting  at  Boston,  in  New  England,  this  IG""       [*25.] 
of  October,  1650 :  there  was  brought  to  our  hands  a  booke  written  (as  was     i^  October. 
therein    subscribed)  by  William  Pinchon,  in   New   England,   gent,  entitled  ti^n  g.  ,„ote3- 
The  ilerritorious  Price  of  our  Redemption,  Justiffication,  &(5,  cleering  it  from  *?''°"  °f '''® 

'■  '         '  o  General!  Court 

some  coiiion  errors,  &5,  which  booke  was  brought  ouer  either  by  a  shippe  a  of  the  Massa- 
chusetts in 
few   dajes    since,  and  contejnmg    many  errors  and    hairesies   generally* con-  New  England. 

demned  by  all  orthodoxe  writers  that  wee  have  mett  with.  Wee  have  judged  it 
meete  and  necessary  (for  vindication  of  the  truth  so  fiirr  as  in  vs  Ijeth,  as  also 
to  kecpe  and  i)ra?serve  the  people  heere  coiiiitted  to  our  trust  and  care  in  the 
true  knowledge  and  faith  of  our  Lord  Jesus  Christ,  and  of  our  redemption  by 
him,  as  likewise  for  the  cleering  of  ourselves  to  our  Christian  brethren  and 
others  in  England,  where  this  booke  was  ijrinted  and  is  dispersed)  heereby  to 
protest  our  innocency,  as  being  neither  parljcs  nor  privy  to  the  Avriting,  com- 
posing, printing,  or  di\'ulging  thereof,  but  that,  on  the  contrary,  wee  detest 
and  abhor  many  of  the  opinions  and  assertions  therein  as  false,  erronjous,  and 
ha;retticall,  yea,  and  whatsoeuer  is  contejned  in  the  sajd  booke  which  are  con- 
trary to  the  Scriptures  of  the  Old  and  New  Testament,  and  the  generall  re- 
ceaved  doctrjne  of  the  orthodoxe  churches  extant  since  the  time  of  the  last 
and  best  reformation ;  and  for  proofe  of  our  sincere  and  plapie  meaning  there- 
in, wee  doe  heereby  condemne  the  sajd  bookes  to  be  burned  in  the  markett 
place  at  Boston  by  the  marshall,  which  was  doiie  accordingly  ;  and  doe  jiur- 
pose,  with  all  convenjent  speede,  to  convent  the  sajd  iP  William  Pinchon 
before  authoijtje,  to  fiude  out  whether  the  sajd  William  Pinchon  will  oune  the 


16  October. 


30  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1650.  sajd  booke  as  his  or  not,  which  if  he  cloth,  wee  purpose,  God  assisting,  to 
jiroceede  with  him  according  to  his  demerritts,  viilesse  he  retract  the  same, 
and  give  full  satisfaction,  both  heere  and  by  some  second  writing,  to  be  printed 
and  dispersed  in  England.  All  which  wee  thought  needcfull,  for  the  reasons 
above  alleadged,  to  make  knowiie  by  this  shorte  protestation  and  declaration. 
Also,  wee  further  purpose,  with  what  convenjent  speede  wee  may,  to  appoint 
some  fitt  person  to  make  particular  answer  to  all  materjall  and  controver- 
sall  passages  in  the  sajd  booke,  and  to  publish  the  same  in  priute,  that  so  the 
errors  and  falsitjcs  therein  maybe  ffully  discovered,  the  truth  cleered,  and  the 
mindes  of  tliose  that  love  and  seeke  after  truth  confirmed  therein. 
[*26.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  declaration  published  yesterday,  concerning  the 

Secre-  to  signe  ^^^^^  subscribed  by  the  name  of  William  Tinchon,  in  ^ew  England,  Gent, 

y«  declaration.  ''  o  ■' 

shall  be  signed  by  the  secretary,  and  sent  into  England,  to  be  printed  there. 
M--  John  Nor-  Itt  is  ordered,  that  M^  John  Norton,  of  Ipswich,  be  intreated  to  answer 

ton  tu  answc''       -n  r     -r>*       i  i        i 

M'  Pinchons      ^^   Puichons  booke. 

^00^^-  Itt  is  ordered,  that    ]\I''  Willjam  Pinchon  shallbe   suiiioned  to  appeare 

be  suiiioned  to  before  the  next  Generall  Courte  of  Eleccons,  on  the  first  day  of  their  sitting, 

^  iT  c  T"  ^'^  S'^^^  ^^^*  answer  for  the  booke  printed  and  published  vnder  the  name  of 
William  Pinchon,  in  New  England,  Gent,  entituled  The  Meritorious  Price  of 
our  Redemjition,  Justlffication,  &c,  and  not  to  departe  without  leave  from 
the  Courte. 

Ans'  to  M'  'In   answer   to   the    petition   of  Henry  Dunster,    prjesident  of  Harvard 

Collcdge,  respecting  the  hundred  pounds  due  from  the  country  to  the  colledge, 

College.  and  rectifying  the  fferry  rent  which  belongs  to  the  colledge,  itt  is  ordered, 

that  the  Treasurer  shall  pay  the  proesident  of  the  colledge  the  some  of  one 
huncked  pounds,  with  two  yeeres  forbearance,  as  is  desired,  and  forbearance 
till  it  be  pajd  out  of  this  next  levy,  that  so  the  ends  proposed  maybe  accom- 
plisht ;  and  for  tire  ferry  of  Charles  Touue,  when  the  lease  is  expired  it  shallbe 
in  the  liberty  and  power  of  the  pra3sident,  in  behalfe  and  for  the  behoofe  of 
the  colledge,  to  dispose  of  the  sajd  fferry,  by  lease  or  otherwise,  making  the 
best  and  most  advantage  thereof,  to  his  owne  content,  so  as  such  he  disposeth 
it  vnto  performe  the  service  and  keepe  sufhcjent  boates  ifor  the  vse  thereof,  as 
the  order  of  Courte  requires. 

Contradicciit-  Itt  was  putt  to  the  question,  whether  the  reasons  menconed  by  the  con- 

toV^^aror*  tradicenting  brethren  of  the  Depu'^  to  y''  censure  of  M"^  Pinchons  booke,  or 
any  other  vpj)on  the  like  grounds  hereafter,  should  be  recorded  or  kept 
on  file,  as  the  law  now  stands.     Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Courte  on  the 

Ans'  to  Pur-     negative. 

petition?  ■'■'^  answer  to  the  petition  of  Purnell  Hughes,  wife  of  William  Hughes,  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  31 

Lynne,    the    Courte    accepts   of  hir   acknouleclgment,   and  according   to   liir      16  50. 
request,    pardons    hir    hir   offence    in    selling    strong   waters   w"'out    license,    ^        '<       ' 

1         T  T   ^  T  16  October. 

wnereby  one  was  distempered. 

In  answer  to  the  petioon  of  John  Baker,  of  Ipswich,  craving  that  the  Ans'  to  John 
seuerall  soines  due  to  him  from  the  country  be  pajd  him  by  the  Tresurer  out  tioa.^"'"^ '" 
of  this  levy,  and  satisfaction  for  tAvo  disajjpointments  by  the  Cou''s  adjourn- 
ment, itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  pay  him  the  seuerall  somes  due  to  him, 
w"'  forty  shillings  for  his  disapointments. 

*Iii  answer  to  the  petition  of  Susannah  Haugh,  widdow,  for  a  resolution       [*37.] 
•whether  the  howse  left  hir  by  the  will  of  M''  Atherton  Haugh,  her  late  husband,  ^"'*'  *°  ^^" 

.  .  Haughs 

being  out  of  repaire,  should  not  be  repaired  by  his  execute""  or  not,  the  Courte  pctiCon. 
determines  the  peticoner  is  to  take  the  howse  according  to  the  will  as  now  it  is. 

Ill  answer  to  the  petition  of  Nicholas  Davison,  in  the  bchalfe  of  M"  Ans'  to  M' 
Rebeckah  Craddocke,  alias  Whichcott,  ffbr  sixe  liundi-ed  seventy  sixe  pounds,  J'jij'*''"^ 
or  thereabouts,  due  from  this  countije  to  the  estate  of  M"^  Mathew  Cradocke, 
the  Courte  declares  that  the  generallitje  of  the  accoumpt  mentjoned  in  his 
petition,  both  of  receipts  and  disbursements,  concernes  only  particular  persons,  or 
company  of  merchants  or  vndertakers,  and  not  the  goucrnment  now  established, 
or  people  in  geuerall,  v:\\o  were  neuer  concerned  therein,  nor  had  euer  any  such 
ingagement  vppon  them  as  the  accoumpts  mentions,  and  therefore  not  respon- 
sable  for  the  debt  demannded,  as  may  appeare  in  the  Courte  booke  by  seuerall 
orders  about  transferring  the  gouernement  and  mannaging  of  the  joinctstocke, 
which  was  sold  to  particular  persons,  vppon  their  owne  accoumpt,  as  by  the 
sajd  booke  and  orders  may  appeare,  in  the  9""  month,  1629 ;  and  that  the 
peticoner  shall  have  M''  Craddocks  accoumpts  deliuered  to  him  agajne. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  jNIargarett  Allen,  late  wife  of  Edward  Lambe,  Ans'  to 
desiring  power  for  hirselfe,  or  Samuell  Allen,  hir  present  husband,  to  make  a  j^i^'g"^*^ 
firme  deede  of  sale  of  the  howse  of  Edward  Lambe,  hirformer  husband,  to  Tliom-  petition, 
as  Bojden,  who  hath  pajd  for  the  same,  the  Com-te  judges  it  mecte  that  admin- 
istration be  grounted  to  the  estate  of  Edward  Lambe  to  Samuell  Allen,  and  also 
power  to  confirme  the  sale  of  the  mentioned  howse  to  the  sajd  Thomas  Bojden. 

Whereas  Mary  Lowle,  the  daughter  of  John  Lowle,  late  of  Newbery,  Courts  graunt 
deceased,  about  seventeene  yeeres  of  age,  is  desirous  to  transport  herselfe  into  " "  ^ 
England,  to  some  ncere  frelnds  of  hers,  from  whom  she  receaved  her  educa- 
tion, and  doth  expect  farther  favoiu'  and  bonefitt  in  soundry  respects,  but  not 
having  at  present  to  defray  the  chardge  thereof,  hath  personally  and  otherwise 
made  request  vnto  this  Coui'te  that  a  legacje  of  tenn  pounds,  due  vnto  her 
from  Richard  Lowle,  her  vnckle,  either  at  the  age  of  twenty-one  yeeres,  or  as 
this  Courte  shall  determine,  maybe  pajd  now  vnto  her,  and  her  sajd  unckle 


32 


THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1650. 


16  October. 


Ans'  to  Mary 

Mansfeilds 

petition. 

[*28.] 

Ans'  to 
Stephen  For- 
ditch  petition. 


AV"  Palmers 
diverse. 


Ans'  to  the  in- 
habitants of 
Sudbury  pe- 
ticon. 
18  S™,  1650. 


Ans'to  Thomas 
Truslar  pe- 
tition. 


Ans'  to  Ed- 
mond  Jackson 
&  Mehittable 
Galloi)s  peti- 
con,  admitted 
in  forma  pau- 
peris. 


discharged  thereof,  this  Courte,  vppon  consideration  of  the  premises,  doe 
graiint  and  order,  that  the  sajd  legacje  of  teun  pounds  be  pajd  vnto  the  sajd 
Mary  Lowle,  and  do  heercby  dischardge  the  sajd  Richard  Lowle,  vppon  the 
pajment  thereof  to  the  sajd  Mary  or  her  asignes. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Mary  ilansfiekl,  the  Conrt  declares  that  the 
lawe  hath  already  provided  for  the  petitioner,  in  respect  of  what  she  desires, 
to  vf"^  they  referr  her. 

*In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Stephen  Forsditch,  for  the  remitting  his 
fforty  pounds,  forfeited  for  his  sonnes  non  appearaunce.  at  Boston  Court,  the 
Courte  thinks  mecte  to  remltt  him  thirty  five  poiuids,  and  that  he  pay  only 
five  pounds  for  his  non  appearance  ;  and  that  his  sonne  be  bound  to  appeare 
to  answer  for  his  faulte  to  the  next  Courte  of  Assistants. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Wllllara  Palmer,  desiring  a  bill  of  divorce 
maybe  grauutcd  him  from  EUlnor  his  wife,  which,  since  his  coming  into  these 
parts,  hath  wholy  deserted  him,  and  marrjed  hersclfe  to  one  ^Vllljam  Pope, 
of  Salisbury,  in  the  county  of  Wilts,  in  England,  and  hath  had  children  by 
him,  the  Courte  judgeth  it  meete,  (on  the  pervsall  of  the  evidence  of  Xtopher 
Batt  and  John  Wheeler,  of  Salisbury  aforesajd,  now  in  New  England,  affixed 
to  the  petition,)  that  the  sajd  William  Palmer  should  be  dlvorsed,  and  declared 
heereby  that  he  is  legally  divorsed. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Sudbury,  desiring  that 
some  men  maybe  appointed  to  lay  out  the  bounds  betweene  Watertoune  and 
Sudbiuy  according  to  the  Courte  order,  Itt  is  ordered,  that  Cajit  Sjmon  Willard, 
Capt  Eleazer  Lusher,  and  M''  Edward  Jackson,  be  coinlssioners  to  setle  the 
boimds  betweene  the  partjes  mentioned  in  the  petition ;  and  for  tlieu'  asistance 
therein,  that  Left  Fisher  be  procured  to  lay  it  out  according  as  it  hath  bin 
grauntecl  by  this  Courte,  and  that  it  be  donne  before  the  tenth  moueth 
next,  and  rctourue  made  of  what  is  don  by  them  to  the  next  Generall  Courte, 
and  that  Capt  Willard  shall  give  notice  to  the  seuerall  persons  concerned  heere- 
in  together  in  convcnjent  time. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Truslar,  of  Salem,  for  the  rcmlttment 
of  the  fine  imposed  on  him  by  the  lawe,  for  neglecting  the  sealing  the  weights 
and  measures  in  the  time  the  lawe  jircscribcs,  the  Courte  graunt  the  petition- 
ers request,  and  remitts  his  fine. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Mchlttabell  Gallop  and  Edmond  Jackson, 
fibr  power  to  make  sale  of  halfe  or  all  the  mill  at  Hlugham,  made  ouer  to  them 
for  the  releife  and  bencfitt  of  the  wife  and  children  of  Thomas  Joy,  the  Courte 
graunts  the  petitioners  req^uest,  viz.,  power  to  sell  the  whole  or  halfe  the 
mill,  as  is  desked. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY"    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  33 

*Hugh  Calkin,  at  his  request,  having  extraordinary  occasions,  is  dismist      1  G  i)  0. 
from  ffuithcr  attendance  on  the  ser\dce  of  the  Courte  for  this  sessions.  '       >        ' 

In  the  triall  of  the  case  betwene  M'  Thomas  Jones  and  M"'  Jolni  Wise-       r*o()  -, 
wall,  on  the  behalfo  of  the  schoole  of  Dorchester,  and  M'  John  Thompson,  Hn-h  Caikins 
resDectins  the  title  of  the  iland  called  Thompsons  Hand,  the  Courte,  on  the  he-ar-  , "",  "'''"  '  , 

in  i-  '  Judgment  of 

ing  of  the  case,  and  examining  the  evidences  brought  by  both  partjes,  judged  the  Courte  iu 

1  •       1  •      1  Ml      i*  1*1  Thompsons 

right  to  belong  to  John  Thompson,  and  gave  him  his  bill  of  costs,  which  was  case. 
three  pounds  seven  shillings  and  slxe  pence,  against  the  tounc  of  Dorchester. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Ricliard  Champnjes  and  Goiilden  Moore,  Answer  to 
and  his  wife,  the  relict  of  John  Champnies,  deceased,  desiring  power  to  sell  champnies  pe- 
the  bowse  and  land  of  John  Champnje  deceased,  being  out  of  repairc,  ffor  the  *'''""• 
necessary  supply  of  the  widdow  and  children  of  the  sajd  John  Chami)njc,  the 
Courte  heereby  graunts  power  to  Richard  Champnies  and  John  Bridg,  of  C"am- 
bridge,  to  make  sale  of  the  howse  and  land  mentioned  in  the  petition,  provided 
they  give  cautiorv  to  the  County  Courte  of  that  shicre  to  be  respous;dl  tliat  it 
be  disposed  of  for  the  vse  and  behoofe  of  the  woman  and  her  children,  ac- 
cording to  the  intent  of  John  Champnies,  deceased. 

In  answer  to  the  pictition  of  Edmond  and  Susanna  Yeomans  for  a  re-  Ans'  to  Ed- 
mitting  the  fine  of  five  pounds  imposed  on  them  for  selling  of  bccre  without  ^^  Yeomans 
license,  the  Courte  accepts  of  their  acknouledgment,  and  remitts  their  fine,  pctit'oa- 
they  paying  tenn  shillings  for  their  petition. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  M"  Elizabeth  Cole,  wjddow,  for  some  reliefe  Ans'  to  m™ 
in  liir  sicke  and  weake  condition,  the  Court  thinkes  meete  to  give  the  peti-    ""^^ P*^ '  '""* 
tioner  twenty  pounds,  to  be  pajd  by  the  Treasurer  out  of  the  countrje  rate. 

In  ans""  to  the  request  of  Zacheus  Gould  and  William  Howard,  in  the  be-  Top&feild  pow 
halfe  of  Topsfeild,  the  Court  doth  graunt  that  Topsfeild  shall  from  henceforth 
be  a  toune,  and  have  power  within  themselves  to  order  all  civill  affiijres,  as 
other  tonnes  have. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  William  Torrey,  requesting  Slatt  Iland  of  AnsnoLeft. 
the  Coiut,  the  Courte  thinkes  meete  to  graunt  the  sajd  Slatt  Iland  to  the  sajd  y^^  ^ 
William  Torrey,  in  consideration  of  his  entring  the  orders  of  Courte  for  two 
or  three  Courts,  not  yott  eiitred  in  the  Deputjes  booke,  so  as  he  dc  doe  it  in  one 
yeare  next  coming,  and  perfect  the  sajd  booke  so  farr  as  he  cann,  provided 
the  iland  be  not  expresly  graunted  to  any  other,  and  also  that  it  be  free  for 
any  man  to  make  vse  of  the  Slatt. 

*In  answer  to  the  petition  of  iMargeiy  Osgood,  of  Ipswich,  widdow,  desir-       [*30.] 
ing  that  some  sequall  order  maybe  determined  by  this  Courte  concerning  the  ^  "g's'oo^'^De^ 
estate  of  Christopher  Osgood,  her  late  husband,  that   her  setfe   and  children  titiou. 
maybe  most  comfortably  provided  for  as  the  estate  will  aflbard,  the  Courte- 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  5 


18  October. 


4  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  G  50.      doth  order,  that  the  whole  buisnes  in  her  petition  be  referred  vnto  M''  Samuell 
Symonds,  Majo''  Daniell  Dennison,  and  M''  John  Norton,  to  putt  an  issew  there- 
vnto,  keeping  as  neere  vnto  the  will  of  the  sajd  Clii-istopher  Osgood  as  maybe. 
Ans'  to  Zacka-  In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Zackary  Phillips  for  a  childs  portion  out  of 

tition.  the  estate  of  ISI""  William  Skipper,  deceased,  in  the  behalfe  of  his  child   he 

had  by  Mary,  his  late  wife,  daughter  to  the  sajd  W"^  Skipjier,  the  Courte  con- 
ceaves  the  will  affixed  to  his  peticon  is  no  will,  and  judge  it  meete  to  grauut 
power' of  administration  to  M''  Cotton  and  ^P  Thomas  Cobbett  for  the  dis- 
posing of  the  estate  therein  mentioned. 
Ans'  to  M'  In  answer  to  M"^  W™  Bradford,  GoQno'',  of   Plimouth,  his  letter  to  this 

Bradfords  let-  r     t         i    •  i  ■  i  •     /^ 

tgf_  Courte,  w*"  the  consent  oi  the  Asistants  there,  respecting  this  Courts  resigna- 

tion of  Shauwamett,  the  Courte  is  willing  to  reassigne  it  to  Pimaith,  according 
to  the  coiTiissioners  advice,  and  that  William  Arnold  and  the  rest  of  the  English 
be  sent  vnto,  to  give  their  consent,  for  themselves  and  the  Indjans,  as  formerly. 

Ans'  to  M'  In  answer  to  INI"^  Nicolas  Eastons  letter,  the  Courte  retournes  the  same 

answer  as  to  INI''  Bradford,  with  this  addition,  that  a  letter  be  written  to  to 
Eoade  Hand,  that  they  forbeare  all  acts  of  jurisdiccon  oucr  Shawwamett  in  the 
meane  time. 

Ans'  to  W"  In  answer  to  a  letter  of  William  Arnold,  the  Courte  retournes  the  same 

answer  as  to  ISI""  Bradford,  and  that  a  letter  be  writt  to  them,  to  give  their 

,  consent  for  themselves  and  the  Indjans,  as  formerly,  to  submitt  themselves  to 

Plimouth  jurisdiction,  so  as  they  protect  them,  and  performe  the  engagements 

of  this  Courte  vnto  them. 

Lef  Torrey  Att  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Weimouth,  Lef '  William  Torrey  is  ap- 

c  ar  coy        pointed  clarke  of  the  writts  there. 

Comittee  to  There  being  a  necessity  of  some  man  to  be  appointed  that  may  gather  in 

vi'utnci's^  "  ^'^"^  ^^^^  vj)poii  such  as  have  had  licenses  to  sell  wine,  to  make  satisfaction  for 
what  is  dew  to  the  country  with  respect  therevnto,  itt  is  ordered,  that  power  be 
heereby  gi\en  to  the  Treasurer  to  call  vppon  such  as  are  yett  behind,  and  to 
receave  what  is  due  from  them,  and  for  the  time  to  come,  that  fuithcr  power 
be  given  vnto  jNI''  Richard  Russell,  M'  Anthony  Stoddard,  and  M''  Frauncis 
Norton,  or  any  tw^o  of  them,  to  be  a  standing  coiiiittee  to  make  composition 
with  any  vintners,  in  the  behalfe  of  the  country,  that  shall  present  themselves, 
vntil  the  Courte  shall  take  further  order  thereabouts. 
r*3l.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Anthony  Stoddard  and  M''  John  Johnson,  sur- 

Coffiittee  tore-  vejor  geiinerall,  shall  heereby  be  impowred  to  agree  and  compound  with  any 

pajre  the  n<    ■        ,  it  -i  •  iii,- 

prisou.  man  or  men  suincjently  to  amend  and  repajrc  tlie  prison,  and  to  doe  what  is 

requisite  thereabouts,  and  that  pajinent  be  made  for  what  shall  be  expended 
for  the  effecting  thereof,  out  of  the  countrjc  rate  of  Boston. 


THE    MASSACHUSI<;TT,S    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  35 

The  Courte,  considering  the  good  service  of  Capt  Humphry  Atherton,  a      1  (J  5  0. 

sargeant,  with  the  twenty  soukljcrs  and  two  men  that  wajted  on  the  horse  in    ^~    '^       ^ 
1  T  •  1       -vT  •     1        •  111  •  1  «     rt  18  October. 

the  expedition  to  the  JNarragansett,  judge  it  mectc  to  allow  the  sajd  capt,  for  „    .... 
his  pajnes,  tenn  pounds,  the  sargeant  ffiffty  shiUings,  the  twenty  men,  besides  recompcncc. 
their  djett  ffor  ffiftteene  dajes,  two  shillings   for  each   day,  apeece,  which  is 
thirty  pound,  and  for  the  two  men  one  shilling  sixepence  a  day,  v/"^^  comes  to 
fForty  five  shillings,  and  all  to  be  pajdc  them  out  of  the  peage  at  sixe  a  penny. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  two  Narragansett  Indjans  that  heljit  to  bring  the  2  coats 
peage  shall  have  two  coates  given  them  for  their  pajnes.  Narrajtansetts 

For  resolution  of  a  qua;stion  propounded  to  the  Courte,  whether,  if  sou-  Resolution  of 

„  „  ,  .  ,  ,  .a  quest,  con- 

erall  men  remoovc  Irom  one  plantation  to  another,  such  psons  so  rcmooving  cemiu^pow- 
may  challenge  an  interest  in  the  stock  of  ponder  and  other  ainunition  by  lawe      ■"■ 
to  be  provided  in  each  townc,  and  to  have  their  proportion  out  of  the  same, 
the  Courte  resolves  the  question  on  the  negative. 

This  Courte,  finding  vppoii  the  retourne  of  the  coiiiittee  for  the  Treas-  Treasurers 
nrers  and  audito'^s  accoumpts,  that  the  countrje  is  indebted  to  the  Treasurer 
thirty  eight  pounds  ffiftteene  shillings  and  seven  pence,  and  that  there  is 
dew  and  owing  vnto  the  countrje  a  soiiie  of  one  hundred  twenty  fowcr  pounds 
tcnn  shillings  and  eight  pence,  as  by  the  particulars  heereafter  mentioned 
doth  appeare,  in  consideration  of  the  good  service  of  M'  Richard  Russell,  in 
the  place  of  Treasurer,  for  about  five  yeeres  past,  and  some  losse  in  goods  taken 
for  fines,  and  not  putt  to  accompt,  doc  order,  that  the  sajd  M'  Russell  shall  rc- 
couer  and  receave  to  his  owne  propper  vse  the  sajd  hundred  twenty  fewer 
pounds  tenu  shillings  eight  pence,  acquitting  the  countrje  of  the  thirty  eia;ht 
pounds  ffiffteene  shillings  and  seven  pence  ;  so  that  which  remajnes  to  the 
Treasurer  is  eighty  five  pounds  ffiftteene  shillings  and  a  penny.  The  particu- 
lars are  as  in  the  originall  appeares. 

*Itt   is   ordered,  that   the   two   hundred   pounds   formerly  graunted  vnto       [*32.] 
Joshua  Winthrop,  the  youngest  child  of  John  Winthrop,  Esquier,  lately  de-  t-'ountrjes  gr.i- 

tujtjcto 

ceased,  shall  be  recorded  in  the  Courte  records,  which  is  donne  hereby.  Joshua  Wiu- 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  interpretation  of  the  lawe  283,  concernning  the  estlomic'tT 
greater  narte  of  the  Magistrates  and  the  greater  parte  of  the  Deiju'",  are  to  be  J"'">  ^^  '"■ 
vnderstood  of  the  greatest  noumber  of  those  that  are  present  and  vote.  deceased. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Richard  Bellingham,  Esquier,  the  secretary,  and  M^  The  vote  of  y» 

'  o  '  J.  ."  -I  major  pte  to  be 

Hills,  or  any  two  of  them,  are  appointed  a  comittee  to  take  order  for  the  vnderstood  of 

1  •         1  T  •  i-     11      1  •  •      those  present. 

printing  the  lawes  agreed  vppon  to  be  printed,  to  determine  oi  all  things  in  p^^_.,    , 
reference  therevnto,  agreeing  with  the  president  ftbr  the  printing   of  them  print  u.eUHra. 
withall  expedition,  and  to  allow  the  title  if  there  be  cawse. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Boston  shall  be  allowed  annually  out  of  the  countrjes 


3G 


THE  EECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


1650. 

IS  October. 
Courts  graunt 
of  ponder  to 
Boston  & 
Charles  Toune, 
for  salute,  &^- 
\V'ainpani 
peagc  currant 
at  8  a  l"",  white, 
&  1  a  l'>,blackc. 


26  October. 

Ans'  to  Jn* 

Palmers  re- 
quest.    Y" 
should  haue 
binn  recorded 
m  May,  16o0, 
but  was  for- 
gotten. 
Vide  file. 


store  one  barrell  of  pouder,  Vf"^  shallbe  deliuered  to  such  as  the  major  gen- 
nerall  shall  appoint  to  receave  it,  so  as  they  salute  euery  shippe  that  saluts 
the  toune  ;  and  further,  that  Charlestoune,  euery  two  yeeres,  shall  have  on 
the  same  termes  one  barrell  of  pouder,  deliuered  to  such  as  Majo"^  Sedjuke 
shall  appointe  to  receave  it. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  wampam  peage,  ffiffteene  dajes  after  this  present  sessions 
of  Courte,  shall  passe  currant  in  pajment  of  debts  to  the  vallew  of  forty  shil- 
lings, the  white  at  eight  a  penny,  and  the  blacke  at  fewer,  so  as  they  be  entire, 
without  breaches  or  deforming  spotts,  except  in  pajment  of  countrje  rates  to 
the  Treasurer,  which  no  towne  nor  person  may  doe,  nor  he  accept  thereof,  from 
time  to  time. 

26  S""",  1650.     The  Courte  was  dissolved. 

The  Court,  on  the  survey  of  a  certajne  writting,  that  Thomas  Nelson,  of 
Rowley,  hath  constituted  M'  Richard  Dumer,  and  impowred  him  as  his  lawful! 
attourney  for  the  disposing  of  his  estate,  as  by  y*  said  writting  more  fully 
appeares,  upon  the  request  of  Jn°  Palmer,  of  Ro-wley,  this  Court  doth  de- 
clare, that  the  power  so  given  &  coinitted  vnto  Til'  Dumer  is  goode  according 
to  lawe,  and  that  he  may  act  therein  w"'out  any  further  confirmation  of  the 


1G51. 

7  May. 

[*33.] 


*^tt  a  Generall  Courte  of  Eleccons,  held  at  Boston,  T"'  May, 

1651. 

JOHN    ENDECOTT,  Esf>,  was    chosen  Gouerno'-,  and  tooke    his    oath 
accordingly. 
Thomas  Dudley,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep'  Gouerno'",  and  tookc  his  oath. 
Richard  Bellingham,  EsqJ, 
Increase  Nowell,  Gent, 
Simon  Bradstreete,  Gent, 
Thomas  Flynt,  Gen?, 
W-"  Hibbjns,  Genl, 
Samuell  Sjraonds,  Gent, 
Cap?  Rofet  Bridges,  Gen?, 
Frauncis  Willoughby,  Gen?, 
Cap?  Thomas  Wiggin,  Gen?, 
Edward  Gibbons,  Gen?, 

Simon  Bradstreete  «&]  

C     t  W"»  H     tl  I  ^^^^  chosen  Comissioners  for  the  Vnited  CoUonjes. 


were  chosen  Asistants. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  37 


Major  Dan  Dennison,  3, 

Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,  4, 

Echvarcl  Eawson,  Gen?,  was  chosen  Secretary. 

Richard  Russell,  Gen?,  was  chosen  Treasurer. 


were    nextly  chosen  Comissioners   to  supply  in      1  G  .5  1 . 
case  of  thejr  fajling. 


■ — Y — 

7  May. 


The  names  of  the  Deputjes  retoumed  from  the  seuerall  tonnes  to  serve 
at  this  Gennerall  Courte  were,  — 

Salem :  Gap?  W""  Hauthorne  &  M'  Henry  Bartholmew. 

Charles  Toune :  M"^  Rich  Russell,  Tres^,  &  Ralfe  Mousall. 

Dorchester :  M'^  John  Glouer  &  Cap?  Humph  Atherton. 

Boston :  Cap?  John  Leuerett  &  M"'  Thomas  Clarke. 

Eoxbury :  M""  John  Johnson,  S'v'  Gen",  &  M^  W""  Parks. 

Water  Toune :  M'  Rich  Broune  &  John  Sherman. 

Lynne  :  M"'  Thomas  Lajghton. 

Cambridge  :  Cap?  Dan  Gookin  &  M'^  Edward  Jackson. 

Ipsuich :  Maj""'  Dan  Dennison  &  M''  John  Whiple. 

Newbery  :  Cap?  "W™  Gerish. 

Wejmouth :  .John  Holbrooke. 

Hingham  :   Cap?  John  Allen  &  M"^  Jeremiah  Houchin. 

Concord :   Cap?  Sjmon  Willard  &  M'  Richard  Griffin. 

Dedham :  Cap?  Eljazer  Lusher  &  Heniy  Chickering. 

Salisbuiy  :  M"^  Thomas  Bradbury. 

Hampton :  Roger  Shawe. 

Rowley  :  Maximilljan  Jewett  &  Joseph  Jewett. 

Braintree  :  Cap?  W™  Tyng  &  Steven  Kinsley. 

Sudbury :   Walter  Hejmes. 

Doner :     ^ 

Glocester:  Hugh  Calkin. 

Woobourne  :   Cap?  Edward  Johnson. 

Wenham :  Esdras  Reade. 

Hauerill :  M--  Robt  Cleoments. 

Reading :  W"  Coudrey. 

Springfcild  :  M'^  Henry  Smith. 

Maiden  :  M"^  Joseph  Hills. 

Andover :  John  Osgood. 


•'o^ 


Cap?  Dan  Gookin,  Speaker  y'  session. 

*To  the  end  that  all  publicke  chardges  may  be  oequally  borne,  and  that       [*34.] 
some  may  not  be  eased  and  other  burdened,  and  being  found  by  expeijence 


38 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1651. 

7  May. 
Order  y'recti- 
fjes  assess- 
ments. 
Contra- 
dicentes  : 
John  Leverett, 
JeiT.  Houchin, 
Tho.  Clarke. 


Encrease  of  y« 

countrje  rate. 


Po-nalty  for 
non  psecution 
of  appeales. 


Order  about 
associates. 


[*35.] 

Direccons  in 
whose  name  to 
sue. 


that  visible  estates  in  lands,  corne,  catle,  are,  according  to  order,  'wholy  and 
fully  taxed,  but  the  estates  of  merchants,  in  the  hands  of  neighbors,  strain- 
gers,  or  their  factors,  are  not  so  obvious  to  view,  but,  vppon  search,  title  of 
their  estates  doe  appeare,  being  of  great  vallew,  so  that  the  lawe  doth  not 
reach  them  by  that  rule  of  taxing  visible  estates,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  and 
enacted  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  all  merchants,  shop- 
keepers, and  facto'''  shall  be  assessed  by  the  rule  of  coinon  estimation,  according 
to  the  will  and  doome  of  the  assesso''-'*  in  such  cases  appointed,  having  regard 
to  their  stocke  and  estate,  bee  it  presented  to  vcjw  or  not,  in  whose  hands 
sooner  it  be,  that  such  great  estates  as  come  yeerely  into  the  countrje  may 
beare  their  proportion  in  publicke  chardges ;  yett  if  any  find  themselves  oucr 
vallewed,  if  they  cann  make  it  appeare  to  the  assesso"",  they  are  to  be  eased  by 
them  ;   if  not,  by  the  next  County  Courte. 

This  Conrte,  taking  into  consideration  the  many  engagements  that  lye 
vppon  vs  in  respect  of  debts  due,  to  be  pajd  to  seuerall  persons  from  the  coun- 
trje, as  also  other  necessary  vnavojdable  cxpences  that  are  like  to  fall  out  this 
yeare,  doe  order,  that  for  those  ends  and  purposes  above  mentioned,  there 
shall  be  levjed,  this  yeare  ensuing,  one  rate  and  a  halfe,  viz.,  halfe  as  much 
more  as  in  other  yeares,  to  be  levjed  and  pajd  in  after  the  vsuall  manner 
provided  by  lawe. 

Whereas  it  is  found  by  experjcucc  that  it  is  an  ordjnary  thing  for 
partjes  to  appeale  from  the  sentence  of  inferior  Courts,  though  they  neuer  in- 
tend to  prosecute  the  same,  but  to  stop  execution  for  the  present,  and  to  ob- 
tajne  such  tcrmes  of  agreement  as  they  desire,  now,  forasmuch  as  euery 
appeale  doth  reflect  prejudice  and  chardge  error  vppon  the  Courte  appealed 
from,  vnder  which  it  lyes  till  the  case  be  heard  and  determined  by  the  Courte 
appealed  to,  itt  is  therefore  heereby  ordered,  that  whosoeuer  shall,  after  the 
ninth  of  July  next,  appeale  from  the  sentence  of  any  Courte,  and  not  prosecute 
the  same  to  effect  according  to  lawe,  shall,  besides  his  bond  to  the  partjc,  for- 
feite  to  the  countrje  the  some  of  forty  shillings  for  euery  such  neglect. 

The  order  made  the  last  yeare  about  associates  respecting  the  two  countjes 
of  Suffblke  and  Midlesex  is  heereby  ordered  to  cease  and  be  of  no  vse  till  the 
next  session  of  this  Couite,  any  lawe,  custome,  or  vsage  to  the  contrary  not- 
withstanding ;  and  that  such  as  have  tviken  their  oathcs  are  declared  heereby 
to  be  freed  therefrom. 

*Whereas  in  suits  at  lawe,  many  tjraes,  such  as  doe  prosecute  the  same  in 
their  oune  names,  in  procuring  the  proces,  intend  and  doe  declare,  in  the  name 
and  in  the  behalfe  of  others,  viz.,  as  executors,  administrators,  assignes,  attor- 
nejes,  guardjans,  agents,  or  the  like,  which  is  not  only  impropper,  but  tendeth 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  39 

also  to  vncertajnty,  for  prerentjoii  whereof  the  Courte  ordereth,  that  from  hence-  1651. 
forth  the  originall  processe,  whether  svmons  or  attachments,  shall  expresse  in  ^  '^  ' 
whose  name  the  plujutiflc  sueth,  whether  in  his  oune  name  or  as  executor  of  the 
last  will  and  testament  of  such  a  man,  or  administrator  of  the  goods  and  chattells 
of  such  a  man,  who  djed  intestate,  or  assignee,  attorny,  or  guardjan  of  such  a 
nuui,  or  as  agent  of  such  a  man,  merchant,  or  the  like  ;  or  otherulse,  if  ex- 
ception be  taken  before  the  plaintiffe  hath  made  his  declaration,  it  shall  be  DirecCons  in 
good,  and  he  shallbe  liable  to  pay  costs.  And  whereas,  tlu-ough  vnskilfulnes  ^^  ^^^ 
of  some  that  make  deeds  and  convejances  of  lands  and  howses,  the  worde 
Heire  is  often  tjmes  omitted  when  an  estate  of  inhseritance  is  intended  to  be 
passed  by  the  partjes,  wherevppon  questions  and  suits  at  lawe  are  apt  to  arise, 
for  prevention  whereof,  for  the  the  tjnie  to  come,  this  Courte  ordereth,  that  in 
all  deedes  and  convejances  of  howses  and  lands  in  this  jurisdiccon,  wherein  an 
estate  of  inhEeritance  is  to  passe,  it  shall  be  expressed  in  these  words,  or  to  the 
like  effect,  viz..  To  have  and  to  hold  the  sajd  howse  or  lands,  respectively, 
to  the  party  or  grauntee,  his  heires  and  assigncs,  for  euer  ;  or  if  it  be  an  estate 
in  tajle,  then.  To  have  and  to  hold,  &c',  to  the  party  or  grauntee,  and  to  the 
heires  of  his  body  lawfully  begotten,  or  to  tiie  heires  males  of  his  body  lawfully 
begotten  belweene  him  and  such  a  one,  his  wife,  or  to  have  and  to  hold  to  the 
grauntee  for  terme  of  life,  or  for  so  many  yeares  ;  provided,  that  this  lawe  shall  DirecSons 
not  include  former  deeds  or  conveiances,  but  to  leave  them  in  the  same  condition 
as  they  were  in,  or  shallbe  in,  before  this  lawe  taketh  effect,  which  shallbe  at 
the  end  of  the  next  session  of  this  Courte ;  provided  also,  that  this  lawe  shall 
not  extend  to  howses  or  lands  given  by  will  or  testament,  or  to  any  land  graunt- 
cd,  or  to  be  graunted,  by  the  freemen  of  a  towne  ;  and  this  lawe  being  of  con- 
cernment to  be  vnderstood  of  euery  man,  there  shallbe  speciall  care  for  the 
publication  thereof ;  and  to  that  end  it  shallbe  distinctly  reade  by  the  counstable 
of  each  toune  in  their  next  toune  meeting,  after  the  end  of  the  fifth  month 
next ;  also  a  coppy  thereof  shall  be  sett  vppon  the  doore  of  their  meeting  howse, 
to  continew  fowerteene  dajes ;  and  the  grand  jury  shall  inquier  and  present 
such  as  shall  neglect  the  publication  thereof,  according  to  this  order. 

*For  preventing  the  deceipt  of  any  person  in  the  packing  of  fish,  beife,  y  [*36.] 

and  porke,  to  be  putt  to  sajle  in  this  and  other  jurisdictions,  itt  is  therefore  Lawe  for  pack- 
ing of  goods  & 
ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  in  euery  towne  w"'in  gageingof 

this  jurisdiccon  where  any  such  goods  are  packt  vp  for  sale,  the  gager  of  that 

toune,  or  of  the  toune  wherein  it  is  putt  to  sale,  or  shipt,  shall  see  that  it  be 

well  and  orderly  perfourmed ;  that  is  to  say,  beife  and  porke,  the  whole  halfe 

or  quarter  together,  and  so  proportionably,  that  the  best  be  not  left  out ;  and 

for  fish,  that  they  be  packt  all  of  one  kinde,  and  that  all  caske  so  packt  be  full, 


40 


THE    IIECOIIDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


Coop's. 


Poenalty  for 
dauncing. 


[*37.] 

Proclamation 
prohibiting 
trade  w'**  Bar- 
badoes,  Ber- 
mudas, Vii- 
ginia,  & 
Antego. 


and  sound,  and  well  seasoned,  setting  his  seale  on  all  caske  so  packt,  for  which 
he  shall  receive  of  the  owners,  for  so  packing  and  sealing,  fower  shillings  p 
tunne ;  but  if  the  gager  doe  only  vejw  them,  and  finde  them  good  and  suf- 
ficjent,  he  shall  sett  his  seale  vppon  them,  and  have  one  shilling  p  tunne 
for  so  doing  ;  and  if  such  goods  so  packt  shall  be  putt  to  sale  packt  vp  in 
caske  without  the  gagers  marke,  he  shall  forfeite  the  sajd  goods  so  put  to  sale, 
the  one  halfe  to  the  informer,  the  other  halfe  to  the  countrje  treasury.  And 
■whereas  notw^standing  the  former  lawe  provided,  tit  Caske  and  Coopers,  page 
the  sixth,  much  damage  is  still  sustajned  by  marchants  and  men  of  trade 
through  the  insufRcjencje  and  vndue  assize  of  caske,  itt  is  therefore  further 
ordered  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Courte,  that  wheresoeuer  any  new  caske  ai-e 
found  putt  to  sale,  being  defective  either  in  workmanship,  timber,  or  assize, 
as  in  that  lawe  is  provided,  vppon  due  proofe  made  before  any  one  magistrate, 
the  sajd  caske  shallbe  forfeited  to  the  informer,  and  the  workeman  for  his  de- 
fiuilt  shall  pay  tenn  shillings  a  tunn  forthwith,  to  the  use  of  the  countrje,  and 
so  proportionable  for  all  greater  or  lesser  caske ;  and  becawse  there  maybe  no 
neglect  in  the  chojce  of  a  gager  to  prevent  the  abuses  exprest  in  this  or  any 
other  lawe,  itt  is  further  ordered  by  the  authorjtje  aforesajd,  that  euery  towne 
within  this  jurisdiccon  wherein  any  caske  are  made  shall  yeerely  make  chojce 
of  one  fitt  man  for  that  worke  and  implojment,  who,  being  presented  by 
the  counstable  within  one  weeke  after  the  chojce  made,  before  any  one 
magistrate,  shall  there  take  the  oath  belonging  to  his  place,  which  if  he  shall 
refuse,  he  shall  pay  the  soiiie  of  forty  shillings,  and  another  to  be  chosen  in 
his  roome ;  as  also  the  toune  or  counstable  shall  either  of  them  suffer  the  like 
poenaltje  for  the  neglect  of  this  order,  any  other  lawe,  custome,  or  order  to  the 
contrary  notwithstanding. 

Whereas  it  is  observed  that  there  are  many  abuses  and  disorders  by 
dancing  in  ordjnarjes,  whether  mixt  or  vnmixt,  vppon  marrjage  of  some 
persons,  this  Court  doth  order,  that  henceforward  there  shallbe  no  dancing 
vppon  such  occasion,  or  at  other  tjmes,  in  ordinarjes,  vppon  the  pajne  or 
pccnaltje  of  five  shillings  for  euery  person  that  shall  so  daunce  in  ordinarjes. 

*Whereas  this  Courte  hath  taken  notice  of  an  act  of  the  Parljament  of 
England,  bearing  date  October  the  3"*,  1650,  prohibiting  trade  with  Bai-badoes, 
Virginea,  Bermudaes,  and  Antego,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Courte  and 
the  authoritje  thereof,  that,  after  publication  thereof,  no  cajjt,  comander,  master 
of  shipp  or  other  vessell,  sajling  from  any  port  or  harbor  within  this  jurisdiccon, 
shall  trade  with  any  of  the  sajd  jirohibited  places  of  Barbadocs,  Virginea,  Ber- 
mudaes, or  Antego,  on  poenaltje  of  forfeiture  of  shippe  and  goods  vnto  this 
commonwealth,  vppon  legall  proofe  and  conviction  thereof;  this  order  to  be 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  41 

presently  published  by  proclamatjon,  and  posting  vp  in  Boston,  Charles  Tounc,      1651. 
and  Salem,  and  to  be  of  force  vntill  the  compljance  of  the  aforesajd  places  of    '       ''       ' 
Barbadoes,  Virginea,  Bermudaes,  and  Antego  with  the  commonwealth  of  Eng- 
land, or  that  this  Courte  take  further  order  therein. 

Forasmuch  as  this  Courte  conceaves  the  old  English  coulo"  now  vsed  by  English  col- 
the  Parliament  of  England  to  be  a  necessaiy  badge  of  distinction  betwixt  the  ^"^^,  ^^  "L^  ' 
English  and  other  nations  in  all  places  of  the  world,  till  the  state  of  England  Castle. 
shall  alter  the  same,  which  wee  much  desier,  wee  being  of  the  same  nation, 
hath  therefore  ordered,  that  the  cap?  of  the  Castle  shall  presently  advance  the 
aforesajd  colours  of  England  vppon  the  Castle,  vppon  all  necessaiy  occasions. 

To  the  end  our  coiiiissioners  for  the  Vnited  CoUonjes  maybe  conveniently  Comission"  o£ 
supplyed  w""  horses,  attendants,  and  all  other  things  necessary  at  such  tjmes  a^o^ance 
as  they  shall  have  occasion  of  travell  vnto  Pljmouth,  Conecticott,  and  New- 
haven,  and   that  troopers   may  not  be  discoiu-aged  from  that  so  behoofefuU 
and  beneficiall  service,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof, 
that  henceforth  om-  coiiiissioners  for  the  United  CoUonjes  shall  provide  and  fur- 
nish themselves  in  all  respects  whatsoeuer,  viz.,  of  horse,  furnitiu-e,  attend- 
ants, and  all  other  things  to  their  ounc  sattisfaction,  for  travell  and  expences  Order  for  im- 
aforesajd,  for  which    they  shallbe  allowed  annually  by  the  countrje   twenty  ^^^^f   °°^' 
pounds  to  each  coiiiissloner,  that  is  to  say,  fForty  pounds  a  yeare  for  all  their  repealed. 
expences,  tjme,  and  travajles  in  and  accompanying  such  their  service  aforesajd ; 
and  the  late  order,  now  at  the  presse,  for  impressing  of  troopers  horses  is 
heereby  repealed. 

Whereas  "the  County  Courts  of  Essex,  vsually  being  kept  at  Salem,  on  Chajnge  of 
the  last  third  day  in  euery  December  hitherto,  w"^"^  by  experjence  hath  binn  ^"""g  ^^^  g"' 
found  to  troublesome  and  dengerous  for  the  magistrates  and  country  to  attend  ^^™'  •"  Essex. 
in  regard  of  the  season,  itt  is  now  ordered,  that  the  County  Courte  in  Essex, 
for  the  winter  Courte,  shall  henceforth  be  yeerely  kept  on  the  last  third  day  in 
Nouember. 

"Whereas  M""  John  Elljott  vndertooke  to  procure  to  the  countrje    tenn  M- Elliotts  dis- 
shillings  from  an  Indjau  for  his  fine  for  being  drunke,  y^  Indjan  being  dead, 
the  Court  releaseth  and  dischardgeth  jNI"'  Elliott  from  that  his  engagement. 

*For  explanation  of  some  words  in  the   printed  lawe  intituled   Leather,       [*.38.] 
viz.,  in  that  section  in  the  margent  entituled  Searchers  sworne  their  Duty,  by  Searchers  of 

leather,  further 

the  words  (Ijne  the  fowerth)  to  make  search,  and  view  within  the  ^cincts  of  power  declared. 
their  limitts,  the  Courte  doth  vnderstand  and  intend  any  howse,  shop,  or  ware- 
house, or  any  other  place  where  they  conceave  leather  jUegally  deUuered  is 
likely  to   be    found,   whether    wrought   into    shooes,  bootes,   or    otherwise. 
Further,  concerning  those  words  in  the  sect  on  the  margent,  entitled  Weil 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  6 


42  THE  KEC0RD3  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1651.  tanned  and  drjed,  pccualtj^,  Ijne  the  fifth,  (so  much  of  his  or  their  sajd  leather, 
'  '  '  &&,)  the  Courte  doth  declare  themselves  to  intend  that  whole  hide,  halfe  hide, 
or  other  peece  or  peeces  of  leather,  which  are,  or  wherein  is,  one  sixteenth 
parte  iusufficjently  wrought.  Further,  concerning  the  last  words  in  that  seel 
intituled  Trjers  of  Leather  sejzed,  viz.,  except  the  party  shall  submitt  before  to 
then-  judgements,  the  Courte  determines  to  be  meant  the  submission  to  the  judge- 
ments of  the  searchers  before  the  fower  or  sixe  men  be  called.  Farther,  this 
Courte  doth  declare  that  the  searchers  of  leather  legally  chosen  and  sworne, 
as  the  sajd  lawe  doth  expresse,  not  xmly  may  execute  their  office,  but  by  their 
oath  and  duty  are  bound  therevnto ;  and  it  is  also  heereby  pvided,  that  neither 
searchers,  sealers,  or  tanners  shall  cutt  or  mangle  leather  in  or  vppon  the 
searching  thereof  more  then  is  necessary. 
M'Matbewes  Itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Marmaduke  Mathewes  shallbe  warned  &  sviiioued 

°   ."coiJt        ''°  '^PPcare  before  this  Court  on  the  fifth  day  next  in  the  morning,  being  the 
15"'  of  this  instant  JSIay,  to  make  answer  to  a  bill  psented  to  the  ilagis'%  w''''  con- 
cernes  former  and  latter  miscarrjages  of  his,  before  the  Court  goes  on  to  any 
hearing  thereabouts. 
Contradicen-  M''  Mathewes  appearing  at  the  tjme  appointed,  there  was  declared  to  him 

thorne  John  '  ^euerall  passages  which  he  deliuered  in  his  sermons  at  Maiden,  w"'',  though 

Leverett,  Tho.  j^g  ouncd  not,  was  proovcd  on  oath  by  John  Hauthorne  and  Tho  Line,  about 
Clarke,  Jerr.  "  _  _ 

Houchin,  w*  ofFence  had  bimi  taken,  to  w'*'  he  gave   in  bis  answer  to  the  Courte,  the 

Stev  Kinsley '  chardge  and  answer  remajnlng  on  the  file.      After  a  full  hearing  &  examining 
HenryBarthoi-  j|jg  same,  the  Courte  declared,  that,  whereas  M"'  Marmaduke  JNLxthewes  hath, 

mew,  John 

Holbrooke,       formerly  and   latterly,   given    ofFence   to   magistrates   and   elde;-s,   and   many 

Tho  Bradbury   bretheren,  in  some  vusafe,  if  not  vnsound,  exj^ressions  in  his  publicke  teach- 
Joseph  Hills,     jjj„^  j^^(j^  ^g  j(.  ]^^tij  Ijinii  manifested  to  this  Courte,  hath  not  yett  given  sat- 

John  Sherman, 

Eobt.  Cc-im-    tisfaction  to  those  magistrates  and  elders  that  were  apjiointed  to  receave  sattis- 

W»Coudrey      faccou  from  him,  since  which  tjme  there  have  binn  deliuered  in  his  publicke 

ministry  other  vnsafe  and  offensive  expressions  by  him,  whereby  both  magis*^, 

ministers,  and  churches  were  occasioned  to  write  to  the  church  of  JMalden  to 

advise  them  not  to  proceed  to  the  ordination  of  INI''  Mathewes,  whicli  offences 

taken  against  him  were  also  made  knowne  to  the  sajd  M"^  Mathewes,  yett, 

contrary  to  aU.  advice,  and  the  rule  of  Gods  word,  as  also  the  peace  of  the 

churches,  the  church  of  Maiden    hath   proceeded   to  the   ordination  of  M'' 

Mathewes,  —  this  Courte,  therefore,  taking  into  consideration  the  premisses  and 

[*39.]        the  daingerous  consequences  and  effects  that  may  *follow  such  jDroceedings, 

Judgm'of         doth  order,  that  both  the  former  and  latter  offences  touchina;  doctrinall  points 

Courte  agamst  o  j  ± 

M'Matthewes.  be  first  duely  considered  by  M''  Sjmon  Bradstreete,  M''  Samuell  Sjmons,  Cap! 
W™  Hauthorne,  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  M""  John  Glouer,  Capt  Eleazer  Lusher, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  43 

Capl  Dauicll  Gookin,  M"  Richard  Bro-niie,  and  Cap?  Ilumphiy  Atherton,  on      1651. 
tlie  eleventh  of  June  next,  at  the  Shipp  in  Boston ;  and  in  case  of  difficulty,    "       ^       ^ 

7  May. 
the  coiiiittee  hath  libci-ty  to  call  in  for  helpe  and  advise  from  such  of  the 

reuerend  elders  as  they  shall  judge  meete,  and  make  retourne  of  their  offence 

against  him,  or  sattisfaction  from  him  be  retourned  to  this  Court  at  the  next 

session  thereof.     And  touching  the  church  of  Maiden  for  offence  in  ordajning 

him,  (notwithstanding  all  advice  formerly,)  itt  is  ordered,  that  they  answer 

their    offence    the    next    sessions    of  this    Courte.     And    as    concerning    M"' 

Mathewes    suffering   himself  to  be  ordajned,  contrary  to   the   rules  of  Gods 

word,  which  should  not   have  so  proceeded,  to  the   offence  of  magistrates,   21  May,  1651. 

reuerend  elders,  and  some  churches,  y^  Courte  doth  order  that  the  sajd  M"" 

Mathewes  shall  give  sattisfaction  to  this  session  of  this  Court  by  an  humble 

acknowledging  his  sinne  for  his  so  proceeding,  which  if  he  refuse  to  doe,  to 

pay  the  some  of  tenn  pounds  within  one  month. 

]\I''  Mathewes  appearing,  and  not  giving  sattisfaction  by  an  humble 
acknowledging  of  his  sinne,  &(?,  itt  was  ordered,  that  the  secretary  should, 
within  one  month,  give  warrant  to  the  marshall  to  levy  on  the  goods  of  M'' 
Mathewes  the  some  of  tenn  pounds,  as  his  fine,  according  to  the  order  of  this 
Courte. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Capt  Daniell  Gookin  and  IM""  Samuell  Dan-  Ans'toCapt. 
forth,  executo'''  to  the  last  will  and  testament  of  M'^  Thomas  Shephard,  late  of  D^nfoftj, 
Cambridge,  deceased,  the  Courte  graunts  their  request,  and  doth  approove  and  pf^ti^on- 
ratify  their  determination  of  a  portion  to   Margarett,  the   relict   of  the   sajd 
Thomas,  in  a  deed  &  convejance  to  M'  Johnathan  Mitchell,  now  husband  to 
the  sajd  Margarett,  of  the  dwelling  howse,  yards,  orchards,  and  seuen  acres 
of  land  adjoyning  thereto,  formerly  belonging  to  the  sajd  Thomas  Shephard ; 
and  further,  the  Courte  gives  them  power  to  sell  a  parcell  of  land,  formerly  y® 
sajd  Thomas  Shephards,  called  Jones  Hill,  about  uineteene  ackers,  so  as  they 
give  securitje  to  the  next  County  Courte  at  Cambridge,  for  the  educating  of  21  3  mo.,  1651. 
the  children,  and  paying  them  their  portions  at  the  tjme  they  shall  attajne  to 
their  ages,  as  the  will  provides. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Hermond  Garrett,  that  the  thowsand  acres  of  Ans'  to  nor- 
land mortgaged  to  him  by  Jethro,  the  Indjan,  at  Assabeth  Riuer,  maybe  lajd  ^^^^^_ 
out  to  him  by  this  Courts  approbation,  or  that  the  mony  he  is  out  therevppon, 
with  his  chardges  and  forbearance,  maybe  ordered  vuto  him,  the  Courte  judg- 
eth  it  meete  to  graunt  that  Capt  Willard  and  LefE  Edmond  Goodenow  shallbe, 
and  is  heereby,  impowred  to  lay  out  the  sajd  thowsand  acres  of  land  to  Har- 
mond  Garrett,  at  Assabeth  Riuer,  aforesajd,  in  case  neither  Water  Toune  nor  22  3  mo.,  1651 
any  of  the  depu"  appeare  once  within  one  month  to  sattisfy  the  sajd  Harmond 


44  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1651.      Garrett  what  mony  and  chardges  he  hath  binn   out,  w'^  forbearance  for  the 


^  same. 

r*An'i  *^^^  ^®  ordered,  that  the  toune  of  Boston  shall  have,  and  heereby  hath, 

J  their  liberty  to  choose  a  new  clarke  of  the  writts,  and  present  him  to  the 

choose  a  new  County  Courte,  after  the  next  session  of  this  Courte,  at  Boston,  for  confir- 

clarke  of  y 

writts.  mation. 

23  3mo.  1651.  j^^  answer  to  the  petition  of  Richard  Parker,  James  Penn,  and  Willjam 

IntcrGst  to  M" 

Winthrop  for    Aspinwall,  for  consideratjon  to  be  allowed  to  M'^  Winthi-op  from  the  countrje, 
r  ^™couX"e    ^°^'  *^^^  '''*^°  hundred  pounds  the  country  gave  to  Joshua  Winthropp,  youngest 
to  Joshua AVin-  gonne  to  John  Winthropp,  Es^,  deceased,  from  the  tjme  it  was  given  and  till 
it  be  pajd  in,  the  Courte  doth  order,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  pay  vnto  the  sajd 
M"  Winthropp  after  the  rate  of  eight  pounds  p  cen'  for  the  tjme  past,  and  so 
till  the  countrje  shall  pay  in  the  sajd  two  hundred  pounds. 
Ans'  to  M'  In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Thomas  Gajner,  the  Courte  graunts  his  request, 

Gajnespeticon.  ^.^^  ^^^^  orders,  that  j\I'  W™  Aspinwall  and  M-^  Edward  Bendall  give  in  their 
accompts,  and  shew  the  grounds  of  their  actings  in  sale  of  the  shipp  Planter, 
vppou  their  oathes,  to  the  County  Courte,  that  is  now  on  adjournment. 
CaptHau-  The  Courte,  considering  the  good  service  of  Cap?  W"  Hauthorne  \nito 

thornes  gratui-  ^j^.^  countrje  in  soundrje  respects,  think  meete,  in  answer  to  his  petition,  to 
graunt  vnto  him  fower  hundred  ackers  of  land  adjoyning  or  neere  vnto  the 
sixe  hundred  ackers  graunted  to  M''  Downing,  betweene  Hampton  and  the 
rivers  mouth  of  Piscataque,  to  be  lajd  out  to  him,  at  his  oune  chardge,  by  M' 
W""  Howard,  of  Topsfeild,  and  Roger  Shawe,  of  Hampton,  provided  it  frus- 
trates not  any  former  graunt,  nor  ^judice  any  touneshipp  or  villadge  that  may 
be  erected. 
Ans'  to  M'  El-  In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  M'^  Thomas  Elbridge,  the  Courte  conceaves  the 

bridge  peticon.  pg^jj jg^gj.  jj^jj^  libertje  to  bring  his  action  of  revejw  against  the  administrators 

of  M"'  Robert  Saltonstall,  as  in  other  cases. 
Ans'toM'  In   ans''  to  the   petition   of  M"'  Thomas  Gajner,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the 

tion""'  ^^''"  charty  partje  mentjoned  in  his  peticon,  which  was  cancelled,  shall  be  accompt- 
ed  good  in  lawe  so  farr  forth  as  the  petitioner,  by  virtue  thereof,  may  revejw 
his  acction  agn'  Capt  W"  Ting  &  M''  Valentjne  Hill.  ^ 

Who  to  keepe  Itt  is  ordered,  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Courte,  that  W  Samuell  Simonds 

f  "court^"""    ^^^  ^^'  Thomas  Wiggins  shall  have  power,  and  are  heereby  desired,  to  keepe 
y^^^^-  the  County  Courts  in  Norfolke  for  this  yeare  ensuing. 

[*41.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  that  Thomas  Dudley,  Es^),  Richard  Bellingham,  Esf, 

Comittee  to       jifr  Increase  Nowell,  M"^  Willjam  Hibbjns,  or  any  three  of  them,  ^vith  Cap? 

draw  instruc-  i   t  i  ^      ~  t  i. 

cons  for  our      Daniell  Gookin,  Capt  Humphry  Atherton,  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  Capt  John 
comissioners.    Lg^g^.g^^^  ^^p?  W»  Ting,  and  M'  Joseph  Hill,  or  any  fower  of  them,  shall  be 


THE    MASSACnUSETTS    BAY   IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  45 

a  coinlttee  to  drawe  vp  instruccans  for  our  honnord  comissioners  for  their 
direccons  against  the  time  when  the  coinission"  of  all  the  collonjes  shall  meete, 
and  this  coiiiittee  is  to  meete  at  the  Shipp  Taverne,  29  of  August,  the  secre- 
tary giving  notice  thereof  to  the  Dep'  Gouerno"'. 

Whereas  seuerall  deppositions  were  presented  to  the  Court  against  M'  M'  Leaders 
Kichai-d  Leader,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M''  Leader  shall  forthwith  be  required  to 
attend  on  the  Gennerall  Courte  the  26"^  of  this  instant  May,  at  one  of  the 
clocke  in  the  afternoone,  to  give  in  liis  answer  thereto.  At  the  tjme  appointed, 
M'  Leader  made  his  appearance,  heard  the  chardge  that  was  brought  against 
him,  gave  in  his  answer,  denying  what  he  was  accused  of;  wherevppon 
the  Court  ordered,  that  Rich*  Bellingham,  Es^,  M'  John  Glouer,  Capt 
Edward  Jolmson,  Capt  Eliazcr  Lusher,  Capt  Dauiell  Gookin,  &  Capt  Hum- 
phry Atherton  should  be  a  coiiiittee  to  drawe  vp  the  case  about  M'  Leader, 
and  make  their  retourne  to  the  Courte,  which  they  did.  The  Courte,  approov- 
ing  thereof,  proceeded  to  censure,  viz.  :  This  Courte,  having  serjously  con- 
sidered the  evidences  which  hath  binn  given  in  against  M''  Richard  Leader, 
doe  finde  that,  contrary  to  the  lawe  of  God  and  the  lawes  heere  established, 
he  hath  threatned,  and  in  a  high  degree  reproached  and  slaundered  the  Courts, 
magistrates,  and  gouernmcnt  of  this  comou  weale,  and  defamed  the  toune  and 
church  of  Lynne,  also  affronted  and  reproached  the  counstable  in  the  execu-  Contradicen- 
tion  of  his  ofEce,  and  doe  therefore  judge,  for  punnishment  of  his  great  offence,  thome,  John 
that  he  shall  make  acknowledgment  of  his  offence  vnto  the  Couite  before  the  l-^""^"'  '"«■ 

'-  miah  Houohin, 

breaking  vp  thereof,  when  this  Courte  shall  appoiute,  and  also  give  sufficjent  Bozon  Allen, 
securitje  ffor  his  good  abearing  heereafter,  and  be  fjned  the  some  of  ffiffty 
pounds,  to  be  pajd  before  the  next  session  of  this  Courte,  towards  the  defray- 
ing of  the  chardge  expended  by  the  Courte  in  hearing  the  case ;  but  in  case 
M''  Leaders  acknowledgement  doe  not  answer  the  Courts  exjiectation  in  way 
of  sattisfaccon  for  his  offence,  that  then  this  Courte  doth  order,  that  M"'  Leader 
shall  pay  to  the  publicke  treasury,  as  a  fine  for  his  offences,  the  soiiie  of  two 
hundred  pounds,  to  be  pajd  before  the  next  session  of  this  Courte. 

M'  Leader  made  &  tendred  his  acknowledgment  to  the  Court  on  SiJ"'  of 
y'  instant  Jfay,  and  it  was  accepted  of  by  the  Court,  which,  w"'  the  e\-idences, 
remajne  on  the  file. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  whatsoeuer  fine  hath  binn  imposed  vppon 

M'  Richard  Leader  by  this  Court  for  his  miscarriages   shall  be   secured  by 

bond  or  otherwise,  and  in  the  meane  tjme  that  his  person  be  responsall  for 

the  fine. 

r*42  1 
*iP  Richard  Leader  acknowledgeth  himselfe  to  stand  bound  to  the  Gen-       ■-     "'J 

_      M'  Leaders  re- 

erall  Court,  in  the  some  of  one  hundi-ed  pounds,  to  pay  the  Treasurer  fl!lffty  cognizance. 


46 


THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


GoiJuo"  gratu- 
itje. 


Meadefeilds 
powers. 


Ans'  to  Ar- 
nolds com- 
plajnt 


Ans'  to  M' 
Ropers  peti- 


Jane  Hawkins 
restrajnt  cou- 
tincwed. 


[*43.] 

Ans'  to  M'  Jo. 
Cutts  pcticon. 


John  Haw- 
thorns license. 


pounds,  in  pursuance  of  the  judgement  of  this  Court ;  as  also  in  flfTty  pounds 
for  his  appearance  at  the  next  session  of  this  Courte,  as  also  in  ffiffty  pounds 
for  his  good  behaviour  towards  the  gouernment  and  people  of  this  jurisdiccon 
whiles  he  remajnes  in  this  collonje,  till  the  next  sessions  of  this  Courte. 

This  Courte  doth  withall  thankfullness  acknowledge  the  good  service  of 
Thomas  Dudley,  Es^,  the  late  honnored  Gouerno%  in  respect  of  his  great 
care  and  faithfulnes  in  the  dischardge  of  that  trust  which  was  coinitted  vnto 
him,  and  doe,  in  the  behalfe  of  the  countrje,  render  him  harty  thanks  for  the 
same,  and  desire  his  kind  acceptance  of  one  hundred  niarkes,  as  a  slender  man- 
ifestation of  their  due  respect  vnto  him,  vntill  the  countrje  be  better  enabled 
to  declare  the  same,  which  hundred  marks  is  heereby  ordered  to  be  pajd  vnto 
him  out  of  the  next  countrje  levje. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Meadefeild,  in  the  county  of  SufFolke,  shall  and  heei'e- 
by  hath  grauuted  vnto  them  all  the  power  and  priviledges  which  other  tounes 
doe  enjoy,  according  to  lawe. 

In  ans''  to  a  complainte  of  W"  Arnold,  Robert  Coles,  W™  Carpenter,  in 
the  name  of  the  rest  of  their  neighbo"  at  Patuxit,  in  their  letter  sent  to  the 
Gouerno'^,  to  be  coiiiunicated  to  this  Courte,  complajning  of  injury  threatned 
them  by  their  neighbo"  of  Providence,  itt  is  ordered,  that  a  letter  be  sent  to 
M""  Roger  W™^  in  the  name  of  this  Courte,  declaring  to  him  that  if  him- 
selfe,  or  the  sergeant,  or  officer  of  Providence  shall  proceed  to  molest  any  of 
the  aforesajd  English  vnder  our  jurisdiccon  at  Shauwatnctt,  or  take  away  ought 
from  them,  or  any  of  them,  by  rates  or  otherwise,  this  Courte  intends  to  seeke 
sattisHiction  for  the  same  of  such,  and  in  such  manner  as  God  shall  putt  op- 
pertunitjes  into  their  liands.  A  letter  was  written  accordingly,  which  remajnes 
on  the  file. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticons  of  jSl"'  Henry  Roper,  complayning  against  M'^ 
Thomas  Broune,  the  Court  j  udgeth  it  meete  to  referr  the  peticoner  to  take  his 
course  in  lawe  against  the  sajd  Thomas  Broune,  and  that  att  the  County  Coru't 
at  Boston  that  is  now  on  adjournment,  if  he  will. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  James,  Thomas,  and  Job  Hawkins  for  liberty 
for  their  mother  to  retourne  and  live  in  this  jurisdiccon,  the  Court,  not  knowing 
how  to  sattisfy  themselves  about  hir,  cannot  give  way  to  hir  coming  to  live  in 
this  jurisdiccon. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  M''  John  Cutts,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  County 
Courte  at  Boston,  now  adjourned,  should  heare  and  determine  the  case  be- 
twecne  him  and  Isl'  Sampson  Lane,  in  reference  to  the  damage  donne  him  by 
the  sajd  Sampson  Lane. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  John  Hawthorne,  this  Courte  j  udgeth  it  meete 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  47 

to  encourage  and  appointe  him,  the  sajd  John  Hawthorne,  to  goe  on  and  keepe      1  G  5  1. 
the  ordjnary  at  Maklen.  '       y       ' 

Whereas  in  the  yeare  1644  there  was  lent  by  this  Court  two  great  gunnes       "      "'' 

•'  J  o  b  Capt.  Kcajne, 

to  the  owners  of  M''  Bridecakes  shipp,  which  vppon  a  just  vallew  appeares  to  Capt.  Tins,  & 

Jo.  Milam  to 

bo  worth  favetcene  ])ounds,  which  sajd  gunns  have  not  hitherto  biun  retourned,  pay  15"  to  M' 
nor  any  thing  allowed  in  consideration  thereof,  this  Courte  doth  therefore  order,  •'""""^  '^''  '  ""^ 

•'  ^  '  '  yc  survcjor,  for 

that  the  owners  of  the  sajd  shippe,  Capt  Robert  Keajne,  Capt  AV""  Ting,  and  agvinnsofy 

countrje. 

John  Milam,  them  or  cither  of  them,  shall   pay  to  M"^  James  Oliuer,  or  the 
survejo''  genncrall,  M''  John  Johnson,  the  aforesajd  some  of  fiveteene  pounds     26  3mo,  51. 
"within  fowerteene  dajes  after  the  date  hereof,  in  iron  or  otherwise,  to  their  or 
either  of  their  sattisfaccon,  for  the  vse  and  behoofe  of  the  countrje. 

Ill  ans'  to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Hingham,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M''  Hingham  mil- 
Bozoone  Allen  shall  be  their  captajne,  and  Joshua  Hubbard  their  Icfteniint.        '  "^  " 

In  ans"^  to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Newbery,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M'^  Newbery  mil- 
W""  Gerrish  shall  be  their  captajne,  and  John  Pike  their  leftennant,  and- that   ""^  " 
the  sajd   toune   shall  goe   to  a  new  eleccon  for  an  ensigne,  when  they  see 
meete. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition   of  Samuell  Hosier,   Charles  Chattocke,  &(3,  of  Water  Tounes 

TTr  c         1  •     •  r     1       n  1^   n*  !•  1  fi"^  remitted. 

VVatertouue,  tor  the  remitting  01  the  nne  01  nower  pounds  imposed  on  them 
by  Cambridge  Courte,  for  want  of  weights  and  measures,  the  Court  being 
sattisfjed  that  they  did  their  indeavo"  to  furnish  themselves  therewith  as  the 
lawe  requires,  and  that  they  are  fl'urnished  with  the  same,  doe  remitt  their 
sajd  fine. 

INIary  Parsons,  wife  to  Hugh  Parsons,  of  Springfeild,  being  coinitted  to  13  3mo,  1651. 
prison  for  suspition  of  witchcraft,  as  also  for  murdering  hir  oune  child,  was 
this  day  called  forth  and  indited  for  witchcraft :  By  the  name  of  Mary  Parsons, 
you  are  heere,  before  the  Geunerall  Court,  chardged,  in  the  name  of  this 
comon  wealth,  that,  not  having  the  feare  of  God  before  your  eyes  nor  in  your 
hart,  being  seduced  by  the  divill,  and  yeilding  to  his  malitious  motion,  about 
the  end  of  February  last,  at  Springfeild,  to  have  familliarity,  or  consulted  w"» 
a  familljar  spirrit,  making  a  couenant  w"'  him,  and  have  vsed  diuerse  divilish 
practises  by  witchcraft,  to  the  hurt  of  the  persons  of  Martha  and  Rebeckah 
Moxon,  against  the  worde  of  God,  and  the  lawes  of  this  jurisdiccon,  long  since 
made  and  published.  To  which  indictment  she  pleaded  not  guilty  :  all  evidences 
brought  in  against  hir  being  *heard  and  examined,  the  Court  found  the  evi-  [*44.  ] 
dences  were  not  sufficcent  to  proove  hir  a  witch,  and  the''fore  she  was  cleered 
in  that  respect.  „  ,     ... 

^  Order  to  bring 

The  Court,  vnderstanding  that  'Mary  Parsons,  now  in  prison  accused  for  a  ^^'"^^  Parsons 

°  ■'  ^  to  a  triall. 

witch,  is  likely,  through  weaknes,  to  dye  before  trjall  if  it  be  deferred,  doe      8: 3; 51. 


48  THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  51.      order,  that  on  the  morrow,  by  eight  of  the  clock  in  the  morning,  she  be  brought 
'        '       ^    before,  and  tried  by,  the  Generall  Courtc,  the  rather  that  M''  Pinchon  maybe 

8  May.  .        .  .    "        .  .        , 

present  to  give  his  testimony  in  the  case. 
13  3  mo,  1G.51.  At  the  same  time  she  was  indicted  for  murdering  hir  chikl,  by  the  name 

of  Mary  Parsons :  Yo"  are  heere  before  the  Generall  Court,  chardged,  in  the 
name  of  this  coinon-wealth,  that,  not  having  the  feare  of  God  before  your 
eyes  nor  in  your  harte,  being  seduced  by  the  divill,  and  yeilding  to  his 
instigations  and  the  wickednes  of  yo'  oune  harte,  about  the  beginning  of 
March  last,  in  Springfield,  in  or  neere  your  oune  howse,  did  wilfully  and  most 
wickedly  murder  your  oune  child,  against  the  word  of  God,  and  the  lawes  of 
this  juiisdiccbn,  long  since  made  and  published.  To  which  she  acknowledged 
hir  selfelfe  guilty. 
Sentence  agn'  The  Court,  finding  hir  guilty  of   murder  by  hir  oune  confession,   &6, 

she  was  re-     '  pi'oceeded  to  judgement :  Yo"  shall  be  carrjed  from  this  place  to  the  place  from 
pnved  to  29  of  -^yhence  yo"  came,  and  from  thence  to  the  place  of  execution,  and  there  hang 
till  yo"  be  dead. 

M"^  \yni  Pinchon,  being  suiiioned  to  appeare  before  the  Gennerall  Courte 
according  to  their  order,  the  last  session,  made  his  appearance  before  the 
Court,  and  being  demaunded  whether  that  booke  which  goes  vnder  his  name, 
and  then  presented  to  him,  was  his  or  not,  he  ans^yered  for  the  substance 
of  the  booke,  he  ouned  it  to  be  his. 

Wherevppon  the  Courte,  out  of  their  tender  respect  to  him,  ofiered  him 
liberty  to  conferr  w'^'all  the  reuereud  elders  now  present,  or  such  of  them  as 
he  should  desire  and  choose.  At  last  he  tooke  it  into  consideration,  and  re- 
tourned  his  mind  at  the  p>sent  in  writing,  vnder  his  hand,  viz.  :  According  to 
the  Courts  advice,  I  have  conferred  w""  the  Reuerend  IsV  Cotton,  M''  Norrice, 
and  M'^  Norton,  about  some  points  of  the  greatest  consequence  in  my  booke, 
and  I  hope  I  have  so  explajned  my  meaning  to  them  as  to  take  of  the  worst 
construccon,  and  it  hath  pleased  God  to  lett  me  see  that  I  have  not  spoken  in 
my  booke  so  fully  of  the  prize  and  merrit  of  Christs  sufferings  as  I  should 
have  done ;  for  in  my  booke  I  call  them  but  trjalls  of  his  obedjence,  yett  in- 
tending thereby  to  amplifie  and  exalt  the  mediatorjall  obedjence  of  Christ  as 
the  only  merritorjous  price  of  mans  redemption.  But  now  at  present  I  am 
much  incljned  to  thinke  that  his  sufferings  were  appointed  by  God  for  a  farther 
end,  namely,  as  the  due  punnishment  of  oui-  sins  by  way  of  sattisfaccbn  to 
divine  justice  for  mans  redemption. 

Subscribed,  yo""  humble  servant  in  all  dutifull  respects, 

WILLJAM   PINCHON. 
Boston,  9  :  S"",  1651. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  49 

*The  Comtc  finding  by  M'  Pinchons  writing,  given  in  to  the  Coiirtc,  that      16  51. 

through  the  blessing  of  God  on  the  pajncs  of  the  reuerend  elders  to  convince  ^    ~^ 

him  of  the  errors  in  his  bookc  contajncd,  that  he  is  in  a  hopcfull  way  to  give 

[  45. J 
good  sattisfaction,  and  therefore,  at  his  request,  judge  it  mcete  to  graunt  him 

liberty,  respecting  the  present  troubles  of  his  family,  to  retourne  home  some 

day  the  next  weeke,  if  he  jilease,  and  that  he  shall  have  M''  Nortons  answer  to 

his  booke  vp  with  him,  to  consider  thereof,  that  so  at  the  next  session  of  this 

Court,  being  the  14"^  of  October  next,  he  may  give  all  due  sattisfaccon  as  is 

hoped  for  and  desired,  to  which  sessions  he  is  hereby  enjoyned  to  make  his 

personall  appearance  for  that  end. 

Forasmuch  as  there  is  a  present  necessitje  that  some  care  be  taken  re-  M' Smiths 
specting  the  case  of  Springfeild,  they  being  at  present  destitute  of  any  magis-  ''''°"^'*'°°- 
trate  or  others  to  putt  issew  to  such  cawses  and  differences  as  shall  or  may 
arise  amongst  them,  vppon  their  request,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the 
authoritje  thereof,  that  M"'  Henry  Smitli,  of  Springfeild,  aforesajd,  for  this 
yeare  ensuinge,  or  till  the  Courte  shall  take  further  order,  shall  heereby  have 
full  power  and  authoritje  to  gouerne  the  inhabitants  of  Springfeild,  and  to  hear 
and  determine  all  cases  and  offences,  both  civill  and  criminall,  that  reach  not 
life,  Ijmbe,  or  bannislunent,  according  to  the  lawes  heere  established  ;  provided 
that,  in  matters  of  weight  or  difficulty,  it  shall  be  lawfull  for  any  partje  to  ap- 
peale  to  the  Courte  of  Asistants,  at  Boston,  so  as  they  prosecute  the  same 
according  to  the  order  of  this  Courte  ;  provided  also,  that  their  trjalls  be  by  the 
oathes  of  six  men,  if  twelve  cannot  be  had  for  that  service ;  and  the  sajd  M"^ 
Smitli  hath  power  to  give  oathes  to  such  counstable  or  counstables  as  shallbe 
legally  chosen,  and  to  examine  witnesses  as  any  one  magistrate  may  doe.  This 
was  deliuered  to  him,  and  he  tooke  his  oath  accordingly. 

M"'  Henry  Smith,  of  Springfeild,  being  a  member  of  this  Courte,  vppon  M' Smiths 
his  request,  having  vrgent  occasions  to  retourne  home,  is  dismist  from  further 
attendance  on  the  service  of  this  Courte  for  this  session. 

In  answer  to  the  pcticon  of  M"'  Emanuell  Dowiiig  ffor  the  laying  out  liis  M'  Downings 
farme  of  sixe  hundred  ackers  of  land,  formerly  graunted  him  by  this  Courte,  ^^^  j^  ,j  ^^j 
in  sattisfaccon  of  fiffty  pounds  heretofore  pajd  &  lajd  out  by  liim  for  the  coun- 
try, itt  is  ordered,  that  the  sajd  six  hundred  ackers  of  land  be  lajd  out  to  liim 
by  M'  W"  Howard,  of  Topsfeild,  and  Eoger  Shawe,  of  Hampton,  betwene 
Hampton  and  the  rivers  mouth  of  Pascataq,,  at  the  chardge  of  the  sajd  M"' 
Downing,  provided  the  sajd  land  specifjed  heerein  be  not  formerly  graunted, 
and  that  it  be  not  fjudiciall  to  any  plantation,  toune,  or  village  that  heere- 
after  may  be  errected. 

*In  answer  to  the  petition  of  M'  Thomas  Makepeace,  desiring  that  power       [*'i6.] 

VOL.  IV.  PART    I.  7 


50 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1651. 

13  May. 
Ans'  to  M'- 
Makepeace 
petiuon. 


Ans'toM'Sam. 
Oliuers  peti- 


Comittee  to  lay 
out  Hampton 
bounds. 


Capt.  of  the 
Castle  allow- 


[*47.J 

Treasurers 
gratuity,  &c. 


may  be  conferred  on  him  for  the  making  good  y''  sale  of  a  parcell  of  land  ly- 
ing at  Braintree,  left  by  M''  Olliuer  Mellowes,  as  a  portion  for  five  of  his  chil- 
dren, to  any  chapman  that  shall  p'sent,  and  that  John  Mellowes  might  have 
two  of  the  sajd  childrens  portions  into  his  hand,  he  giving  security  to  y" 
County  Court  for  the  same,  till  the  children  come  of  age  and  shall  dischardge 
him,  as  the  sajd  Thomas  Makepeace  is  to  doe  for  the  other  two  cliildrens  por- 
tions, &S,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  the  peticoner  his  request,  and 
doth  impower  them  heereby  accordingly. 

In  ans"^  to  the  petition  of  M"'  Samuell  Oliuer,  craving  allowance  for  his 
medicuie  and  pajnes  expended  on  M''^  Elizabeth  Cole,  which  came  to  eight 
pounds  fowerteene  shillings,  hir  estate  being  too  lowe  to  beare  it,  the  Court 
judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  the  peticbners  request,  and  orders  that  he  be  al- 
lowed the  some  of  eight  jjounds  fowerteene  shillings  out  of  the  next  coimtry 
levye  by  the  Treasurer. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  M'  Samuell  "Winslow,  M'  W""  Pajne, 
M"^  Samuell  Hall,  and  M'  Thomas  Bradbury,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  be 
coinissioners  to  lay  out  the  northcrmost  Ijne  of  Hampton,  toward  Pascataq, 
Eiuer. 

This  Court,  vppon  good  information,  vnderstanding  that  the  capt  of  the 
Castle,  at  his  oune  chardge,  purchast  for  the  service  of  the  Castle  sixe  mur- 
therers,  two  boates,  and  a  druiiie,  which  are  to  be  inventorjed  with  the  sur- 
vejor  generall,  as  also  hath  repajred  some  carriages,  and  more  is  to  be  donne  in 
respect  of  hutts,  to  the  vallew  of  twenty  pounds  or  thereabouts,  all  which 
should  have  binn  donne  and  majntajned  at  the  chardge  of  the  countrje,  and 
be  left  in  good  repajre  at  the  end  of  the  tenne  yeeres  agreed  vppon  by  the ' 
toimes,  —  now,  in  consideration  of  the  chardge  above  mentioned,  lajd  out,  and 
to  be  lajd  out,  by  the  sajd  captaine  of  the  Castle,  this  Courte  doth  order,  that 
the  sajd  Capt  Richard  Davenport  shall  have  allowed  him  that  thu'ty  pounds  a 
yeere  which  hath  binn  reserved  out  of  the  hundred  and  ffiffty  pounds  a  yeere 
allowed  when  the  garrison  was  suppljed  with  more  men ;  provided,  that  the 
sajd  cajitajne  majntajne  and  keepe  in  good  repajre  those  things  above  men- 
tioned, at  his  own  propper  costs  and  chardge,  vntill  the  expiration  of  the  sajd 
tenn  yeeres,  when  he  shall  deliuer  the  same  to  whom  the  countrje  shall  ap- 
pointe,  and  this  to  beginn  from  the  eight  of  the  eighth  month,  1648,  and  so  to 
continew  vntill  the  Courte  take  further  order. 

*In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  M''  Richard  Russell  for  allowance  for  his  losse 
in  the  late  lawe  books,  w""''  was  occasioned  by  the  Courts  alteracon  of  some 
things  therein,  &6,  itt  is  ordered,  that,  in  consideration  of  those  losses  men- 
tioned in  the  pcticon,  and  other  that  he  hath  lately  sustajued,  he  shall  have 
dlowed  him  twenty  pounds  out  of  the  next  rate. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  51 

Whereas  there  was  dew  to  the  couiitrje,  from  the  inhabitants  of  Charles      1  G  5 1 . 

Toune  which  had  their  howses  bui-nt,  the  soiTie  of  seven  pounds  sixteene  shil-  "^       *        ' 

lings,  or  thereabouts,  for  their  countrje  rate,  this  Courte,  in  consideration  of  ...         ' 

their  great  losse,  doe  order,  that  the  foresajd  soine  of  seven  pounds  sixteene  7"  to  Charles 

Toune. 

shiUings  shall  be  remitted. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  INIary  Long,  of  Dorchester,  this  Courte  declares,  Ans'  to  Mary 
that  there  cann  come   no  damage  to  any  magistrate  or  other  appointed  by 
lawe  that  shall  marry  the  sajd  Mary,  so  as  shee  be  three  tjmes  published,  as 
the  lawe  requires. 

lu  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Josejih  Armitage  ffor  an  abatement  of  a  fiue  of  Ans'  to  Joseph 
five  pounds,  imposed  on  him  for  not  acquainting  the  counstablc  of  a  psons      j."  '^^^ 
being  druncke  in  his  company,  as  the  lawe  requires,  the  Courte  sees  no  cawse 
to  abate  the  petitioner  any  part  of  that  fine. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  John  Hajden,  of  Brajntrje,  craving  some  re-  John  Hejdens 
lease,  itt  is  ordered,  (in  regard  of  the  great  affliccon  of  God  that  Ijes  vppon  ^''"'5' 
the  petitioner  in  regard  of  his  child,  as  also  liis  late  losse  of  a  cowe,  being 
halfe  his  estate,)  that  he  shall  be  yeerely  allowed,  out  of  the  countrje  levy  that 
issues  out  of  that  toune,  the  soinc  of  five  pounds  towards  the  chardge  of  keep- 
ing the  child,  &  the  touue  is  to  allow  the  rest ;  and  this  till  the  Courte  see 
cawse  to  w"'drawe  their  benevolence. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Richard  Carter,  desiring  sattisfaccon  of  M'^  Ans'to  Richard 
Saunders  for  caiTying  his  wife  to  England  after  he  forbad  him,  itt  is  ordered,  ^^^ 
the  petitioner  may  have  liis  cawse  trjed  at  the  next  adjournment  of  the  County 
Cotu't  in  Boston. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  George  Muiiings,  for  the  reparation  of  the  Ans'  to  George 
prison  howse  and  what  is  necessary  thereabout,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Jn"  pg^jj,,,^ 
Leverett,  M"^  Thomas  Clarke,  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  the  survejo""  gennerall, 
and  Ralfe  Mouseall,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  be  comissioners  to  procure 
the  same  effectually  and  sufficiently  to  be  doune  ;  and  whereas  Caj)?  John 
Leueret,  M'  Clai-ke,  and  the  Treasiu'er  have  engaged  themselves  to  disburse 
so  much  pay  as  shall  accomplish  the  sajd  worke,  itt  is  further  ordered,  that,  in 
confidence  thereof,  they  shall  receave  out  of  the  publicke  treasury  so  much 
as  they  shall  disburse  beforehand  out  of  the  next  countrje  rate,  with  two  shil- 
lings in  a  pounds  allowance,  provided  the  worke  be  donne  before  the  next 
sessions  of  this  Courte.  r»48  ] 

*In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  John  Johnson  and  W""  Parkes,  of  Eoxbury,  Ans'  to  Jo. 
ouerseeres  to  the  last  will  and  testament  of  Captajne  Joseph  "Weld,  late  of  Eox-  p^^j^^  f,,^  ^q^. 
buiy,  aforesajd,  desiiinge  that  the  howse  and  lands,  orchard,  garden,  barnes,  firmation  of 

howse  &  land 

and  eighteene  ackers  of  vpland  and  meadowe  to  the  same  belonging,  as  it  lyes  toM'Stoddaid. 


62 


THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


Ans'  to  Jn" 
Ottis  petition. 


Ans'  to  Elias 

Parkmans 

petition. 


Ans'  to  W» 

Phillips 

petition. 


Comittee  to  lay 
out  Haverill 
bounds. 


GeoTg  Indian. 


[*49.] 

Day  of  humilli- 
ation,  18  June. 


scittuate  and  being  in  Eoxbuiy,  may  be  confirmed  to  Anthony  Stoddard  and 
his  heires  foreuer,  so  as  the  sajd  Anthony  Stoddard  gives  in  seciu-ity  to  the 
County  Court,  now  on  adjournment,  and  to  the  sajd  ouerseers,  to  both  tlieir 
content,  to  ■pa.j  vnto  Daniell,  Sarah,  and  Marah,  as  they  shall  attajne  vnto 
their  respective  ages,  the  some  of  fifFty  pounds  a  peece  in  currant  pay,  or  to 
the  survivo"'  or  survivo""^  of  them  the  some  of  one  hundred  and  fifFty  pounds, 
keeping  them  at  his  oune  chardge  till  they  shall  attajne  their  respective  ages  ; 
and,  in  case  all  the  sajd  children  should  dye  before  they  come  to  age,  then  to 
pay  what  is  justly  dew  to  them,  did  they  live,  (by  their  fathers  will  and  intent 
therein  exprest,)  to  the  first  Avives  children,  —  the  Courte  thinkes  it  meete  to 
graunt  the  peticoners  reqttest,  and  doe  confirme  the  sajd  howsc  and  land  to 
the  sajd  Anthony  Stoddard  accordingly. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  John  Ottis,  desiring  the  fine  imposed  on  him 
by  the  County  Court  at  Boston  for  his  vnworthy  carrjagc  and  resistance  of 
the  counstable,  the  Coiu't  determines  he  shall  pay  his  whole  fine. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Elias  Parkeman,  desiring  sattisfaccbn  for  some 
wast  in  his  goods,  which  suffered  in  the  marshalls  hand,  vnder  an  attach- 
ment at  the  suite  of  Alexander  Mom'oo,  &d,  the  Court  referrs  the  peticoner  to 
take  his  course  at  law  for  his  sattisfaccon. 

In  ans'^  to  the  petition  of  W'"  Phillips,  itt  is  ordered,  that  whatsoeucr  is 
dew  to  the  petitioner  from  the  countrje  shallbe  pajd  him  out  of  the  next  coun- 
trje  rate. 

In  ans"^  to  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Haverill  for  a  new  coiiiittee 
to  be  appointed  to  lay  out  their  bounds,  M''  Dumer  and  M''  Carleton,  who 
formerly  were  appointed  thereto,  being  now  in  England,  the  Courte  graunts 
their  request,  and  doth  order,  that  Joseph  Jewett,  John  Halsten,  Robert  Hal- 
sten,  and  W™  Widds,  or  any  two  of  them,  whereof  Joseph  Jewett  to  be  one, 
shall  lay  out  the  bounds  of  Haverill,  according  to  the  graiint  of  this  Coiu'te, 
before  the  next  session  of  this  Courte,  to  which  they  shall  make  their  re- 
tourne. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  George,  the  Indian  at  Lynn,  this  Courte  referrs 
him  to  bring  his  accon  in  some  inferior  Court  against  any  that  withhold  any 
land  vnjustly  from  him. 

*This  Court,  taking  into  consideration  how  farr  Sathan  prevajles  amongst 
vs  in  respect  of  witchcrafts,  as  also  by  drawing  away  some  from  the  truth  to 
the  profession  and  practize  of  straunge  opinnions,  and  also  considering  the 
state  and  condition  of  England,  Ireland,  and  Scotland,  and  the  great  things 
now  in  hand  there,  conceive  it  necessary  that  there  be  a  day  of  humilliation 
throughout  our  jiuisdiccon  in  all  the  churches,  and  doe  therefore  desire  and 


13  May. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 

order,  that  the  eightenth  day  of  the  fowerth  moneth  shallbe  sett  apart  for  that 
end  and  purpose,  and  that  the  depu'^  of  the  seucrall  tonnes  give  notice  to  the 
seuerall  elders  of  their  churches  of  the  Courts  desire  hecrcin. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  retourne  of  the  coiuissioners  appointed  by  this 
Courte  to  settle  the  bounds  betwixt  Water  Toune  and  Sudbury  be  entred 
amongst  the  Couit  records  at  lardge,  the  Court  approoving  thereof. 

The  agreement  of  vs,  the  persons  whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  being    9,  3»»,  1651. 
deputed,  authorised,  and  betrusted  by  the  tounes  of  Water  Toime  and  Sud- 
bury for  the  setling  the  division  line  betwixt  the  sajd  tounes,  as  followeth, 
viz.,  doe  consent  and  conclude,  that  — 

The  Ijue  which  was  formerly  by  M'^  John  Oliuer  drawen  in  that  place,  Sudbury  & 

.  Water  Toune 

and  the  same  markes  revised,  about  three  yeeres  since,  in  the  presence  oi  some  ij.„e  agred  on 
of  each  of  the  aforesajd  tounes,  coiiionly  called  the  old  Ijne,  betwixt  Water- 
toune  and  Sudbury,  that  the  same  Ijnc  shall  for  euer  stand,  and  be  accompted 
the  true  partition  Ijne  and  bounds  dividing  and  ^  the  extent  of  the  lands 
of  both  the  tounes  aforesajd,  which  sajd  Ijne  is  described  as  followeth :  It  be- 
ginning at  the  southward  parte  of  Concord  bounds,  runneth  thence  thorough  a 
great  pjne  swampe  and  one  smale  peece  of  meadow,  and  so  to  the  vpland,  and 
then  to  an  angle  betwixt  two  hills,  where  a  trench  is  digged,  the  highest  parte 
of  the  sajd  hill  being  eastward,  from  which  angle  the  Ijne  runnes  away  south, 
about  halfe  a  pointc  westerly,  which  Ijne,  from  the  beginning  next  Concord 
bounds  to  the  angle  aforesajd,  is  about  ninety  sixe  rodd,  and  this  southerly 
Ijne  that  runns  fi-om  the  angle  aforesajd  vppon  a  streight  Ijne,  as  it  is  now 
marked,  having  these  remarkable  places  therein :  one  rocke,  called  Groutshead, 
and  a  stake  by  the  carteway  leading  from  Sudbiuy  to  Water  Toune,  and  so  to 
a  pine  hill,  being  short  of  a  pond  about  eighty  eight  rod,  att  which  pine  hill 
Sudbury  bounds  end.  Wittnes  our  hands,  each  of  vs,  in  the  behalf  of  the 
tounes  enti'usting  seuerally. 

WALTER   HAJME, 

EDMOND   RICE, 

EDMOND   GOODENOW, 

THOMAS   NOJCE, 

JO:    GROUT, 

JOHN   RUDDOCKE, 

HUGH   GRIFFIN,  in  behalf  of  Sudbury, 

JOHN    SHER]MAN,  in  the  behalfe  of  AVater  Toune. 

*Wee,  whose  names   are   herevnto   subscribed,  being  by  order  of  the       [  50.] 


54  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

IGol.  Genn"  Coiu-te,  dated  18"^  of  the  8"^  month,  1650,  deputed  and  authorized  to 

'       ''       '  setle  the  bounds  betwixt  Water  Towne  and  Sudbury,  doe  heereby  declare,  that 

o  „       r  vppon  the  mcasurlna;  of  the  niidle  line  of  Water  Towne  bounds  from  the  niect- 

"Water  Touue  ing  howse  to  the  length  of  eight  miles,  being  performed  by  Left  Joshua  Fisher, 

bounds. 

being  by  the  Courte  aforesajd  appojnted  therevnto,  as  also  vppon  seuerall  other 
considerations,  doe  judge  that  the  Ijne  before  expressed  and  described  in  the 
couenant  and  agreement  betwixt  the  persons  of  both  the  aforesajd  tounes,  who 
have  subscribed  their  names  therevnto,  is  lajd  out  according  to  the  Courts 
graunts  formerly  made  to  Water  Toune,  and  doe  therefore,  for  our  j)arts,  and 
according  to  the  trust  to  vs  coiiiitted,  setle  and  determine  the  sajd  Ijne  to  be 
10,  2'>mo,  1651.  the  true  Ijne  of  partition  betwixt  the  sajd  bounds  of  the  sajd  tounes  in  all 
respects,  according  as  it  is  in  their  agreement  expressed,  and  do  fully  concurr 
with  them  therein,  as  aforesajd,  to  be  a  finall  end  to  all  differences  in  or  con- 
cerning the  Ijne  aforesajd  forever. 

Subscribed,  SIMON   WILLARD, 

ELJAZER   LUSHER, 
&  EDWARD   JACKSON. 

2000  ackers  Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  Water  Toune  shall  have  two  thousand 

Water  Toimo  ^^ckers  of  land,  lajd  out  necre  Assabcth  Riucr,  joyning  to  the  boiuids  of  Sud- 
bury, in  respect  of  such  land  as  was  wanting  to  them,  which  was  grauntcd 
them  formerly  by  this  Courte  to  be  the  bounds  of  their  toune,  and  that  C'apl 
Willard  and  Left  Goodenow  see  this  donne  and  performed,  and  make  re- 
tourne  thereof  to  the  next  session  of  this  Court,  provided  it  be  not  pjudiciall 
to  any  former  graunts. 
Watertoune  &  The  bounds  betweene  Water  Toune  and  Concord  is  by  those  two  tounes 

bounds'^or         hccreby  acknowledged  to  be  that  which  was  lajd  out  by  M"^  Jn°  Oliver  and 
acquiest,  &c.     ^\^q  ^est  appointed  for  that  purpose,  and  the  aforesajd  tounes,  by  their  depu- 
tjes,  doe  likewise  acknowledge  themselves  to  be  justly  sattisfyed  in  that  re- 
spect, and  therefore  is  recorded  at  their  request  amongst  the  Court  records, 
by  order  of  the  Court. 
HuRh  Caiuins  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  Hugh  Calkin,  the  deputy  for  the  towne  of  Glocester, 

smission.  ^^  regard  of  his  removall  out  of  this  jurisdiccon,  shall  be  dismist  from  the 
service  of  this  Courte,  provided  that  the  toune  make  chojce  of  another  to  suply 
his  roome. 

The  Courte  graunts  liberty  to  Cuttshamakin  to  buy  three  pounds  of  shott, 
soe  as  he  leaves  the  order  where  he  buyes  it. 
[*51.]  *Whereas  this  Courte  did,  in  the  yeare  1646,  give  encoui-agement  for  an 

assembly  of  the  messengers  of  the  churches,  in  a  synod,  holden  at  Cambridge, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  55 

and  did  desire  their  connsell  and  helpe  for  the  drawing  vp  a  confession  of       1  G  5  1 . 
the  faith  and  discipljne  of  our  churches,  according  to  the  word  of  God,  tliis    "^^     ''    ~^ 

13  Mav 

Coiirte  doth  accompt  itselfe  obhged  to  acknowledge  the  piows  zeale  and  labors  , 

^  '-^  or  ^  jjg^v  meeting 

of  the  assembly  in  that  worke,  which  doth  appeare  by  that  di-aught  of  dis-  of  y°  eMeis  to 

consider  of  v* 

cipljne  presented  to  the  last  Generall  Coiirte  for  their  approbation  and  allow-  churches 

ance,  and  by  them  coiiiended  to  the  considei'ation  of  the  seucrall  churches  in  '^^'°"''"'^^- 

this  jurisdicctin,  many  of  whom  were  pleased  to  present,  to  the  last  session  of 

the   last   Courte,  by  the   deputjes  of  the  seuerall  tounes,  seuerall  objeccons 

against  the  sajd  confession  of  discipljne,  or  seuerall  particulars  therein,  where- 

vppon  the  Courte  judged  it  convenjent,  and  conducing  to  peace,  to  forbeare 

to  give  their  approbation  thereto,  vnlesse  such  objeccons  as  were  presented  were 

cleered  and  remooved ;  fFor  which  purpose  this  Courte  doth  order  the  secritary  Contradicen- 

to  drawe  vp  the  sajd  objections,  or  the  principall  of  them,  and  to  deliuer  the  ettTh«  Clarke' 

same  to  the  Reuercud  M''  Cotton,  within  one  month,  to  be  communicated  to  ^^'°  "T'"?-  •'"- 

remy  Houchin. 

the  elders  of  the  seuerall  churches,  who  are  desired  to  meete  and  cleere  the 
sajd  doubts,  or  any  other  that  maybe  jmparted  to  them  by  any  other  person, 
concerning  the  sajd  draught  of  discipline,  and  to  retoiune  their  advice  and 
helpe  herein  to  the  next  session  of  this  Generall  Courte,  which  will  be  alwajes 
zealows,  according  to  their  duty,  to  give  their  testunony  to  eueiy  truth  of  Jesus 
Christ,  though  they  cannot  sec  light  to  impose  any  formes  as  necessary  to 
be  observed  by  the  churches  as  a  binding  rule. 

In  ans"^  to  the  request  of  "VV™  Heath,  of  Eoxbury,  being  above  sixty  yeeres  W"'  Heath,  ex- 
of  age,  the  Court  thinkes  it  meete  to  graunt  that  he  shall  henceforth  be  ex-  !"?  '"^  '^^ 

o   '  o  trajnxng. 

empted  from  all  traynnings. 

In  ans'^  to  the  petition  of  Christopher  Collens,  desiring  the  forfeiture  of  Christopher 
his  bond  of  tenn  pounds,  in  not  legally  j3>senting  his  appeale  to  effect,  may  ,°,™i',*°  ^"'^ 
be  remitted  him,  itt  is  ordered,  that  he  should  pay  but  fibwer  pounds  to  the  countrye. 
countije,  the  rest  of  his  bond  being  remitted,  and  he  releast  from  the  sentence 
of  Salem  Court  by  his  appeale. 

In  ans''  to  the  request  of  Capt  W"  Ting,  itt  is  ordered,  that  twenty  20'  allowed 
shillings  shall  be  allowed  him,  and  discomjited  out  of  the  ffiveteene  pounds  ,,.j^'^j    "'^ 
dew  to  the  countiy  from  him,  Capt  Keajne,  and  John  Milam,  for  wood  the 
Depu'^  had  and  burnt  of  his  in  1644. 

*In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  M"^  Samuell  Winsly,  desiring  a  remittment  of       [*52.] 
the  forfeiture  of  his  bond  for  not  psecuting  an  appeale  to  effect,  according  to  ^l'  "Winsly 

fined  20»  to  y 

law,  the  Coui't  declares  the  forfeiture  of  the  bond  belongs  to  the  partje,  M''  count. 
Samuell  Hall,  and  orders  that  the  jietiooners  shall  pay,  as  a  fine  to  the  countrje, 
for  his  non  appearance  at  the  last  Quarter  Court  to  psecute  his  appeale,  the 
some  of  twenty  shillings. 


13  May. 

Differenc  be 


5G  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1651.  Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  difFereuce  betweene  Hingham  and  Scittuate,  about 

sixty  ackers  of  meado-w',  be  referred  to  the  consideration  of  tlie  commissioners 
of  the  collonies,  to  whom  it  propperly  belongs,  to  put  an  issue  thereto. 
twecii'  Hiiig-  "Wliercas  the  majo""  gemierall  having  no  power  by  his  coiuission  to  issue 

ham  &  Scittuat 

reffered  to         forth  his  Warrant  for  the  gemierall  trajning  of  his  regiment,  without  the  con- 
,      °  '  sent  of  the  counsell  of  the  coinonwealth,  when  he  shall  see  good,  which  is  no 

Addition  to  the  '  °         ' 

major  genner-   more  then  any  one  major  of  a  regiment  hath,  this  Court  declares  and  orders, 

alls  coiuission.  .  n      i     n    i  .        ,  _.     .  i  •  i  • 

that  the  majo"'  geuneraii  shall  have  power,  in  the  couiission  to  be  given  liim, 

to  call  his  oune  regiment  once  a  yeere,  if  he  see  cawse  to  trajiie  them,  without 

the  consent  of  the  counsell  of  the  coinonwealth. 

Ordered  that  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  the  debt  of  twelve  pounds  odd  money,  dew  to  M' 

12"  &c  be  dis-  Eatoii,  GoQiio''  of   New  Haven  jurisdiccon,  at   his   request   shallbe   pajd   to 

chardged  to       Benjamin  Gillum,  by  the  Treasurer,  of  this  next  levy,  to  his  content. 

Ben.  Gillum. 

Gratuity  to  M'  ^'^  ^^  ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  pay  the  servants  of  INt  Phillips 

PhiiUps  5cr-      fforty  shillings,  as  a  reccompence  for  their  attendance  on  and  service  to  the 

Court,  as  also  tenn  shillings  to  M''  Bellinghams  servants  for  their  paines. 

M'  Nortons  Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  thanks  of  this  Courte  be  retourned  to  M""  John 

gra  ui  J  e.         Norton  for  his  worthy  paines  in  his  full  answer  to  M''  Pinchons  booke,  which 

at  their  desire  he  made,  and  since  presented  them  with,  and  as  a  recompence 

for  his  pajnes  and  good  service  therein,  that  the  Treasurer  pay  him  twenty 

pounds  out  of  the  next  levye. 

[*53.]  *The  Courte  having  heard  the  whole  cawse  of  difference  betweene  Jn° 

Judgment  m     ]\Iilani,  plaintiffe,  and  W"  Francklin,  defendant,  ffor  digging  away  apeece  of 

FrancliUn  case,  ground  before  his  brother  Humphry  Milams  howse,  as  it  was  trjed  by  way  of 

action  at  the  County  Courte,  in  Boston,  28  :  ll"",  1650,  that  Court  rejecting  the 

verdict  of  the  jury,  who  found  for  Jolin  Milam  tenn  pounds  damages,  and 

tenn  shillings  and  seven  j^eiice  costs,  itt  was  ordered  by  the  Gennerall  Courte, 

that  William  Franckljn  should  make  the  sajd  landing  place  vp  againe  as  good 

as  it  was  before  he  cutt  it  away,  before  the  last  of  July  next,  which  then  was 

twenty  foote  in  length,  and  in  breadth  eight  foote  at  one  end,  and  about  four- 

teene  at  the  other  end,  as  it  appeared  to  a  coiiiittee  to  the  Courts  sattisiiiction, 

that  so  Humphry  Milam  may  enjoy  liberty  of  landing  goods  according  to  cou- 

enant,  or  else  to  forfeite  to  John  Milam  all  the  land  that  he,  the  sajd  Franckljn, 

hath,  lying  and  being  betweene  the  creeke  and  the  ffront  of  Humphry  Milams 

howse,  and  howeucr  to  pay  the  costs  of  the  Gen"  Courte,  which  is  twenty  five 

shilhngs. 

The  Courte  is  adjourned  vntill  the  fowerteenth  of  October  next,  at  noone. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  57 

Mt  the  second  Sessions  of  the  Gennerall  Courte  of  Electjons,  held  at     1651. 
Boston,  the  fowerteenth  of  October.,  1651.  ^       ' 

14  October. 

WHEREAS,  by  favor  of  the  most  honnorable  rarljament  of  England,  or  Powder  im- 
councell  of  state,  seuerall   quantities    of  pouder  and  other  aniuni-  P"' "   •"■  ^''- 

J-  •>  i-  ported  m  or 

tion  are  yearely  imported  into  this  jmisdiccon  for  our  necessary  vse  and  de-  out  of  this  ju- 

risdiucon  to  be 

fence,  now,  to  the  end  the  favor  wee  receive  may  not  be  abused,  nor  ourselves  tooke  notice  of. 
deprived  of  the  just  and  necessary  vse  thereof,  itt  is  heereby  ordered  and 
enacted,  that  all  marchants  or  others  that  shall  import  into  this  jurisdiction 
either  pouder,  lead,  bullets,  shot,  or  any  aiuunition  whatsoeuer,  shall  give  par- 
ticcular  notice  of  the  quantitje  thereof  to  the  publicke  notary,  vppon  the  pajne 
or  poenaltje  of  forty  pounds,  within  one  month  after  the  landing  of  such  goods, 
who  is  heereby  enjoyned  to  take  particcular  notice  of  the  same,  with  the  marke 
and  uoumber,  and  faithfully  to  enter  the  same  in  a  booke,  and  the  names  of 
the  persons  to  whom  they  are  sold  or  vnto  whose  custody  or  power  they  are 
coinittcd,  that  he  may  give  accompt  thereof,  vppon  oath,  to  the  Gouernor, 
Deputy  Gouernor,  or  any  of  the  councell,  from  tjme  to  tjme ;  and  the  sajd 
notarj-  is  hereby  prohibitted,  vppon  the  pajnc  or  pa?naltje  of  one  *hundred  [*54.'] 
pounds,  to  graunt  certifEcats,  to  any  merchant  or  other,  of  any  such  goods 
but  such  as  he  shall  have  particcular  notice  of  and  entrcd  as  aforesajd ;  and  to 
the  end  this  order  may  be  duely  observed,  and  that  no  person  may  pleade  igno- 
rance thereof,  itt  is  heereby  ordered,  that  the  captajne  of  the  Castle  shall, 
vppon  the  arivall  of  any  shipp  or  other  vessell  in  the  Massachusetts  Bay,  from 
any  forraigne  parts,  give  notice  of  the  contents  of  this  order  to  the  master  or 
marchant  of  any  such  vessells,  and  the  coimstables  of  all  other  port  tounes  in 
this  jurisdictjon  are  heereby  enjoyned  to  doe  the  same. 

Whereas  this  Courte  did,  in  the  yeare  1646,  give  encouragement  for  an  synodbooka 
assembly  of  the  messengers  of  the  chm-ches  in  a  synode,  and  did  desire  theire  IPP"^"*^*''""- 
helj)e  to  drawe  vp  a  confession  of  the  faith  and  discipljne  of  the  churches  ac- 
cording to  the  word  of  God,  which  was  presented  to  this  Courte,  and  coiuended 
to  the  seuerall  churches,  many  of  whom  retourned  their  approbatjon  to  the 
sajd  draught  in  gennerall,  and  diucrse  of  the  cliurches  ^sented  some  objec- 
tjons  and  doubts  against  some  particculars  in  the  sajd  draught,  wherevppon,  by 
order  of  this  Courte,  the  sajd  objections  were  coiiiended  to  the  consideration  of 
the  elders,  to  be  cleared  and  remoovcd,  who  have  retoiu'ned  their  answer  in 
writing,  —  the  Courte,  having  pervsed  the  sajd  answer,  doe  thankfully  acknowl- 
edge their  learned  pajnes  therein,  accounting  themselves  called  of  God,  espe- 
cially at  this  tjme,  when  the  truth  of  Christ  is  so  much  opposed  in  the  world,- 

VOL.    IV. PAKT    I.  8 


58 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1651. 

14  October. 
Trade  with 
Barbadoes 
graunted  on 
caution,  &c. 


[*55.] 


Against 
daiiiage  by 
Ewjne,  &c. 


Cap'"  for 
troopes. 


Countrjcs  seale 
to  be  affixed. 
Gov  seal. 


to  give  their  testimony  to  the  sajd  booke  of  discipljne,  that  for  the  substance 
thereof  it  is  that  wee  have  practised  and  doe  behevo. 

Whereas,  by  order  of  this  Courte,  bearing  date  tlie  two  and  twentieth  day 
of  the  third  month,  1651,  all  trade  with  Berbadoes,  Antego,  Bermudaes,  Vir- 
ginea,  is  prohibitted,  and  thereby  all  masters  of  shipps  or  smaller  vessells  are 
coiaianded  to  forbeare  the  transporting  of  any  goodes  or  merchandise  to  the 
aforesajd  places,  as  being  in  rebelljon  against  the  coiiionwealth  of  England,  vppon 
the  poenahy  of  forfeiture  of  shippe  and  goods,  since  which  tjme,  having  intel- 
ligence that  the  fleete  vnder  the  coiiiaund  of  S'  George  Aiscue  is  sett  forth  by 
the  Parljament  for  the  reducing  of  the  sajd  Island  of  Berbadoes,  and  may  proba- 
bly, by  Gods  blessing,  have  effected  the  same,  and  this  Courte  having  re- 
ceived a  petition  from  diners  merchents  and  mariners  *for  libertje  to  sajle  forth 
of  these  parts  to  the  sajd  prohibitted  places,  or  some  of  them,  giving  in  caution 
not  to  land  any  goodes  in,  or  trade  with,  any  the  sajd  places,  except  they  be 
reduced  to  the  obedjence  of  the  coiSon-wealth  of  England,  wherefore  itt  is 
ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  Goflno''  or  any  two 
magistrates  shall  have  power  to  graunt  libertje  to  such  as  have  or  may  desire 
to  sajle  forth  hence  to  any  of  the  aforesajd  places,  takeing  sufficjent  caution  by 
bond  of  one  or  two  thousand  pounds  starling,  more  'or  lesse,  according  to  the 
burden  of  the  shipp  or  valew  of  the  cargo  they  shall  sett  forth  withall. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  all  fences 
against  cornefeilds,  meadow  grounds,  gardens,  orchards,  or  jjastures,  which  are 
made  of  stone,  pales,  rajles,  riuers,  or  creekes,  or  any  other  fences  which  are 
allowed  by  such  men  as  are  appointed  in  the  seuerall  tonnes  to  vjew  fences,  to  be 
sufficjent  against  greate  cattell ;  all  s\^jne  breaking  through  such  fences  as  afore- 
sajd shall  be  liable  to  make  sattisfactjon  for  all  damages,  vppon  due  prooffe,  as 
in  other  cases,  any  lawe  or  custome  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Vj)pon  a  motion  made  to  this  Courte,  in  the  bchalfe  of  the  seuerall  troopers 
within  this  jurisdiccon,  itt  is  ordered,  that  libertje  shall  be  graunted  them 
to  choose  captajnes  oner  their  seueral  troopes,  provided  that  they  be  such  as 
shallbe  allowed  by  this  Courte,  as  captajnes  of  foote  companjes  are. 

This  Court  conceives  it  both  dishonnorable  and  troublesome  that  at  all 
tjmes,  even"  when  the  most  weighty  occasions  of  the  countrje  are  in  hand,  the 
Gouerno''  should  affixe  the  seale  of  this  colonje,  as  often  as  men  have  occasions, 
to  letters  of  attornejes  and  certifficats,  and  yett  have  nothing  for  the  same  ; 
and  therefore  orders,  that  henceforth,  ■\\hosoeuer  shall  procme  the  seale  of  this 
collonje  to  any  certificat,  letter  of  attorney,  or  comission,  shall  satisfy  the 
present  Gouernor  for  the  tjme  being,  five  shillings  for  affixing  the  seale  afore- 
sajd, and  attesting  thereto  vnder  his  hand. 


14  October 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  59 

To  the  end  that  no  other  but  good  and  wholesome  beerc  be  brewed  at  any      1  G  5  1 . 
tjme  heereafter   in  tliis  jurisdiction,  to  be   sokl   cither  for  the  supplyes   of 
shippes,  or  other  smaller  vessells  at  sea,  or  for  the  vse  of  travajlers  or  others, 
in  ordjnarjes,  and  that  no  oppression  or  wrong  be  donne  to  any  in  this  mis- 
teiy,  itt  is  *ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  no  person       [*56.] 
whatsoeuer,  after  the  publication  thereof,  shall  vndertake  the  calling  or  worke  Order  for 

[)  r  £  WGf s 

of  brewing  bcere  for  sale,  but  only  such  as  are  knoune  to  have  sufficjent  skill 
and  knowledge  in  the  arte  or  mistery  of  a  brewer ;  and  further,  it  is  ordered 
by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that  if  any  vndertaker  for  victualing  of  shipps,  or 
other  smaler  vessells,  for  sea,  or  master,  or  owner,  or  any  other  shall  make  it 
appearc  that  any  beere  bought  of  any  person  within  this  jurisdiction  doe 
proove  vnfitt,  vnwholesome,  and  vseless  for  their  sea  supply  in  that  kinde, 
through  the  jnsufficjency  of  the  malte,  or  brewing,  or  vnwholesome  caske,  the 
person  wronged  thereby  shallbe,  and  is  hereby,  enabled  to  recouer  sDquall  and 
sufficjent  damages  by  action  against  that  person  that  put  that  beere  to  sale ; 
and  forasmuch  as  within  this  jurisdictjon  seuerall  ordjnary  keepers  doe  brew 
theire  oune  beere,  itt  is  further  ordered  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that  all 
such  as  put  beere  to  sale  shallbe  able  to  proove  that  they  put  into  euery  hogs- 
head of  beere  that  they  -sell  for  tlu-ee  pence  tbe  quarte,  into  the  brewing 
thereof,  sixe  bushells  of  good  barly  malte,  and  into  euery  hogshead  of  beere 
sold  at  two  pence  the  quarte  fower  bushells  of  malte,  and  into  euery  hogs- 
head of  beere  sold  at  a  peimy  the  quarte  two  bushells  of  like  good  malte,  and 
so  proportionably,  in  greater  or  smaller  quantitjes ;  and  whosoeuer  shall  offend 
in  fay  ling  in.  any  of  these  proportjons,  by  putting  in  lesse  quantitje  of  malte, 
or  selling  beere  at  higher  prises,  shall  forfeite  for  the  first  offence  therein  forty 
shillings,  for  the  second  offence  therein  shall  forfeite  their  license,  and  that  it 
shall  be  lawfull  for  euery  ordjnary  keeper  to  brew  beere  for  sale  of  tkreepence 
the  quarte,  any  lawe,  custome,  or  vsage  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Vppon  information  of  diuers  loose,  vajne,  and  corrupt  persons,  both  such  To  prevent 

youths  mis- 

as  come  from  forraigne  parts,  as  also  some  others  heere  inhabiting  or  residing,  carriage, 
which  insinuate  themselves  into  the  ffellowshipp  of  the  younge  people  of  this 
countrje,  drawing  them,  both  by  night  and  by  day,  from  their  caUings,  stud- 
djes,  honest  occupations,  and  lodging  places,  to  the  great  dishonnor  of  God, 
greife  of  their  parents,  masters,  teachers,  tvtors,  guardjans,  ouerseeres,  and 
such  like,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  who- 
soeuer shall  henceforth  any  wajes  cawse  or  suffer  any  yeonng  people  or  per- 
sons whatsoeuer,  whether  children,  servants,  apprentices,  schollars  belonging 
to  the  coUedge,  or  any  other  Lattjn  schoole,  to  spend  any  of  thek  time  or  es- 
tate, by  night  or  day,  in  his  or  their  *company,  howse,  shopp,  shippe,  or  other      [  57.  J 


60 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


Jurors  for 
Bpeciall  courts. 


Jiirors  out  of 
Midlesex. 


[*58.] 

Against  ex- 
cesse  in  ap- 
pairell. 


vessell,  whether  ordjnary,  taverne,  victualling  howse,  cellar,  or  other  place 
where  they  liaue  to  doe,  and  shall  not,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  dischardge  and  has- 
ten all  such  youths  to  theire  seuerall  implojments  and  places  of  abode  or 
lodging  aforesajd,  if  their  being  in  any  such  place  be  knoune  to  them,  or  any 
other  servant  or  helpe  in  the  familje,  or  supplying  the  place  of  a  servant  at 
sea  or  at  land,  that  then  such  person,  howse  holder,  shop  keeper,  shipmaster, 
ordinary  keeper,  taverner,  victualler,  or  other,  shall  forfeite  the  soiiie  of  forty 
shillings  vppon  legall  conviccon  before  any  magistrate  or  others  authorized  to 
end  smale  cawses,  one  halfe  to  the  jnformer,  the  other  halfe  to  the  countrje ; 
and  all  counstables  in  their  seuerall  jurisdictjons  are  also  authorized  to  acta 
heerein  as  is  provided  in  reference  to  the  lawe  of  innkeepers. 

AVhereas  there  have  binn  complaints  made  to  this  Courte,  that,  vppon  the 
choice  and  suiuouing  of  jurjes  for  speciall  Courts,  there  hath  binn  some  jn- 
treilchments  vppon  the  freemens  libertjes,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this 
Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  ordjnary  course  of  the  chojce  of 
jurjes  by  the  freemen  shallbe  attended  in  the  chojce  and  suiSoning  of  juijes 
for  speciall  Courts,  and  no  other  way,  in  the  places  where  the  jurjes  shallbe 
chosen  and  suiiioned. 

There  being  seuerall  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  county  of  Suffolke  having 
expressed  themselves  that  they  have  suffered  some  wrong  in  regard  the  jurjes 
chosen  to  serve  at  the  Courtes  of  Asistants  are  alwajes  made  chojce  of  out  of 
the  county  of  Suffolke,  to  trye  such  actions  as  ar#  brought  from  all  parts  of 
the  jurisdiction,  wliich  this  Courte  haveing  considered  of,  doth  order,  that 
from  henceforth  all  jurors  shall  be  made  choice  of  respectively  out  of  the 
county  of  Midlesex  also. 

Although  seuerall  declaratjons  and  orders  have  binn  made  by  this  Courte 
against  excesse  in  apparrell,  both  of  men  and  weomen,  wliich  have  not  taken 
that  effect  as  were  to  be  desired,  but,  on  the  contrary,  wee  cannot  but  to  our 
greife  take  notice  that  jntollerahle  excesse  and  bravery  hath  crept  in  vppon 
vs,  and  especially  amongst  people  of  meane  condition,  to  the  dishonnor  of 
God,  the  scandall  of  our  profession,  the  consumption  of  estates,  and  alto- 
gether vnsuiteable  to  our  pouertje  ;  and  although  wee  acknowledge  it  to  be  a 
matter  of  much  difficultje,  *in  regard  of  the  blindnes  of  mens  mindes  and  the 
stubbornes  of  their  willcs,  to  sett  downe  exact  rules  to  confjne  all  sorts  of 
persons,  yett  wee  cannot  but  account  it  our  duty  to  coinend  vnto  all  sortes  of 
persons  the  sober  and  moderate  vse  of  those  blessings  which,  beyond  expecta- 
tion, the  Lord  hath  bin  pleased  to  affoard  vnto  vs  in  this  wildernes,  and  also 
to  declare  our  vtter  detestation  and  dislike  that  men  or  weomen  of  meane 
conditjon  should  take  vppon  them  the  garbe  of  gentlemen,  by  'wearing  gold 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND,  6] 

or  silver  lace  or  buttons,  or  points  at  their  knees,  or  to  walk  in  great  bootes,      1  (]  5  1 . 
or  wc'onicn  of  the  same  rancke  to  -weare  silke  or  tiffany    hoodes   or  scarfes,  ''      ^ 

wliicli  though  allowable  to  persons  of  greater  estates,  or  more  liberall  educa- 
tion, yett  wee  cannot  but  judge  it  jntollcrable  in  persons  of  such  like  condi- 
tion :  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Courte,  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that 
no  person  within  this  jurisdiccon,  or  any  of  their  relations  clejjcnding  vppon 
them,  whose  visible  estates,  reall  and  personall,  shall  not  exceede  the  true 
and  indifferent  valew  of  two  hundred  pounds,  shall  weare  any  gold  or  silver 
lace,  or  gold  and  silver  buttons,  or  any  bone  lace  Sbove  two  shillings  p  yard, 
or  silk  hoods  or  scarfes,  vppon  the  pccnaltje  of  tenn  shillings  for  cuery  such 
offence,  and  euery  such  deljnquent  to  be  presented  by  the  graund  jury. 
And  forasmuch  as  distinct  and  particular  rules  in  this  case,  suiteable  to  the 
estate  or  quallitje  of  each  person,  cannot  easily  be  given,  itt  is  fiuthcr  ordered 
by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that  the  selectmen  of  euery  toune,  or  the  major 
part  of  them,  are  heereby  enabled  and  required  from  tjme  to  tjme  to  have 
regard  and  take  notice  of  ajiparrell  in  any  of  the  inhabitants  of  their  seuerall 
tonnes  resj)ectively,  and  whosoeuer  they  shall  judge  to  exceede  their  rancks 
and  abillitjes  in  the  costljnes  or  ffiishjon  of  their  apparrell  in  any  respect, 
especially  in  the  wearing  of  ribbons  or  great  bootes,  (leather  being  so  scarce 
a  comoditje  in  this  countrje,)  lace  pointes,  &S,  silke  hoods  or  scarfes,  the  select 
men  aforesajd  shall  have  power  to  assesse  such  persons  so  offending  in  any  of 
the  particulars  above  mentioned  in  the  country  rates  at  two  hundred  pounds 
estates,  according  to  that  proportion  that  such  men  vse  to  pay  to  whom  such  ap- 
parrell is  suiteable  and  allowed,  provided  this  lawe  shall  not  extend  to  the  re- 
straint of  any  magistrate  or  publicke  officer  of  the  jurisdiction,  their  wives  and 
children,  *who  are  left  to  their  discretion  in  wearing  of  apparrell,  or  any  setled  [*59-] 
millitary  officer  or  souldjer  in  the  tjme  of  millitary  service,  or  any  other  whose 
education  and  implojments  have  binn  above  the  ordjnary  degree,  or  whose 
iestates  have  binn  considerable,  though  now  decajed. 

Whereas  it  doth  appeare  to  this  Courte  that  suites  at  lawe  are  groune  Boston 
more  frequent  of  late  in  this  jurisdiccon  then  formerly,  and  especially  in  the 
toune  of  Boston,  by  reason  of  the  greate  concourse  of  people  and  increase  of 
trade  there,  whereby  County  Courts  are  much  prolonged;  and  forasmuch  as 
many  cijmes  also  are  comitted  in  the  sajd  toune,  both  by  night  and  by  day, 
both  by  straungers  and  others  inhabiting  in  this  country,  which  cither  through 
the  want  of  juformation  or  authoritje  not  constantly  at  hand,  sundry  offenders 
and  offences  escape  vnpunnished,  for  preventjou  whereof,  the  Grennerall  Courte, 
assembled  at  Boston,  14"»  of  October,  1651,  have  thought  meete  that  there  be 
seven  men,  of  the  fieemen  resident  in  Boston,  annually  chosen  by  the  freemen 


conns* 
sioners. 


^2  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONS  OF 

of  the  sajd  toune,  and  presented  to  the  Courte  of  Asistants,  '^^'ho  heerehy  have 
power  to  authorize  the  sajd  seven  freemen  to  be  coinissioners  for  the  sajd 
toune,  to  act  in  all  things  coiuitted  to  their  trust,  as  is  heereafter  exprest,  who 
shall  from  tjme  to  tjme  be  sworne  before  the  sajd  Courte,  or  the  Gouerno' 
then  in  being,  to  the  faithfull  dischardge  of  that  service.  And  for  the  present 
yeare  this  Courte  hath  given  and  graunted,  and  doe  heereby  give  and  graunt, 
full  coiuission  and  authority  to  M"^  Richard  Parker,  'M'  Nathaniell  Duncan, 
Capt  Robert  Keajne,  Capt  Willjam  Ting,  M'^  Edward  Ting,  M'  Anthony 
Stoddard,  and  Capt  John  Leveret,  or  any  five  of  them,  or  any  three  of  them 
with  one  magistrate,  to  heare  and  determine  all  ciuill  actions  which  shall  be 
brought  before  them,  not  exceeding  the  sume  of  tenn  pounds,  arising  in  the 
necke  of  land  on  which  the  toune  is  sittuated,  and  also  Nodles  Island,  or  be- 
twixt any  persons  where  both  partjes  shallbe  inhabitants  or  residents  within 
the  sajd  necke  or  Nodles  Island  aforesajd,  or  any  other  not  inhabitting  in  this 
jurisdiction ;  and  also  to  heare  and  determine  all  civill  actjons  whatsoeuer 
legally  brought  before  them,  not  exceeding  the  summe  of  tenn  pounds,  as 
aforesajd,  provided  they  kecpe  a  booke  of  record  for  the  entry  of  all  cawses, 
evidences,  testimonjes,  sentences,  and  judgements,  as  the  lawe  provides  in  like 
[*60.]  cases;  which  sajd  commissioners  are  authorized  annually  to  *appointe  a  clarke 
of  their  Court,  and  to  demaund  and  receave  of  euery  plaintiffe,  in  all  cases 
or  actions  not  exceeding  fForty  shillings,  the  suiiie  of  one  shilling  sixepence, 
and  for  all  other  actjons  the  soiiie  of  five  shillings,  and  for  all  other  things  the 
accustomed  fFees  ;  provided  also  that  the  sajd  coinissioners  from  tjme  to  tjme 
shall  publish  their  Courte  dajes,  as  the  three  coinissioners  in  tonnes  are  by 
lawe  to  doe ;  and  for  discouery,  prevention,  and  punnishment  of  sinn  and 
misdemeanors  in  the  sajd  toune  of  Boston,  power  and  authoi'itje  is  heereby 
given  and  graunted  to  the  sajd  coinissioners,  and  euery  of  them,  by  warrant 
vnder  their  or  his  hand,  to  convent  before  them,  or  any  one  of  them,  all  such 
persons  as  shallbe  coniplajned  of  for  such  offences,  or  otherwise  legally 
brought  to  their  cognizance,  and  to  heare  and  determine  the  same  according 
to  lawes  hoere  established,  as  any  magistrate  may  doe,  provided  the  fines 
jmposed  by  them  doe  not  exceede  forty  shillings  for  one  offence.  And  that 
oui'  sajd  coinissioners  may  the  better  and  more  dilligently  endeavor  the  suj)- 
pressing  of  sinn  and  misdemeanors  and  the  breach  of  the  peace  in  the  sajd 
tonne,  their  coiuission  shallbe  from  tjme  to  tjme  vnder  the  hand  of  the 
secritaiy  for  the  Gennerall  Courte.  And  also  all  marshalls,  constables,  and 
other  inhabitants  respectively  from  tjme  to  tjme  shallbe  ayding  and  asisting 
our  coinissioners  afforcsajd  in  this  behalfe ;  and  that  no  person  may  be  dis- 
couraged or  any  way  damaged  heereby,  itt  shallbe  in  the  libertje  of  any  person 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  63 

to   appeale  from   any  sentence   of  any  of  them  from  tjme  to  tjme  vnto  tlie      1G51. 
Courte   of  Assistants,  provided  that    no    action    arising  vnder   tenn    poinids  '^       ' 

14  October. 

within  the  sajd  Ijmitts  of  Boston  Necke  and  Nodles  Ishmd,  as  aforesajd,  shallbe 
received  into  any  County  Courte ;  and  that  this  coiiiission  sliallbe  of  force  for 
tijall  one  whole  yeere. 

Whereas  there  was  a  lawe  made  in  the  yeere  1650,  concerning  straungers  Tiimeto20 
coming  into  this  jurisdictjon,  wherein  all  straungers  ariving  within  any  of  our  ' 
port  tonnes,  above  the  age  of  sixteene  yeres,  were  enjoyned  to  be  accomptable 
before  the  Gouernor,  Dep*  Gouernor,  or  two  of  the  honnored  magistrates  of 
the  occasion  of  their  coming  into  these  parts,  as  in  that  order  more  largely 
doth  appearc,  which  sajd  order  is  long  since  expired,  itt  is  therefore  heereby 
ordered,  that  the  sajd  lawe  be  againe  revived,  and  declared  by  this  Courte  to 
stand  in  force  till  this  Court  shall  see  just  cawse  to  repeale  the  same,  which 
law  is  at  large  recorded  in  this  booke,  page  20. 

*Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  all  sorts  of       [*61.] 
come  shall  be  pajd  into  the  countrje  rate  for  the  yeare  ensuing,  at  these  prises  ^"^es  of  come 
following,  viz.,  wheate  and  barley  at  five  shillings  p  bushell,  rye  at  foiu-e  shil-  rate. 
lings,  pease  at  three  shillings  eight  pence,  and  Indean  at  three  shillings  p 
bushell ;  all  good  and  merchantable  come  and  all  other  things  pajd  into  the 
country  rate  to  be  vallewed  according   to   the   prises  of  all   sortes   of  come 
above  mentjoned. 

•  Forasmuch  as  this  Courte  hath  occasion  many  tjmes  of  sending  letters  to  Order  for  a 
England,  to  the  Dutch,  French,  Roade  Island,  as  also  to  the  other  jurisdiccbns,  ,  .j_ 
and  ordinarily  doe  receive  letters  from  them,  and  that  sometjmes  such  as  are 
of  great  concernment  to  vs,  that  wee  may  more  readily  finde  out  the  contents 
of  such  letters  as  aforesajd,  itt  is  ordered,  that  from  henceforth  there  shall  be 
two  seuerall  bookes  kef)t,  the  one  by  the  secritary,  the  other  by  the  clarke  of 
the  Depu*%  wherein  letters  and  other  forrajgne  transactions,  so  much  as  this 
Courte  shall  appointe,  shall  be  recorded ;  and  becawse  it  is  a  worke  that  will 
require  much  tjme  and  labour,  letters  being  many,  and  some  very  large,  itt  is 
heereby  further  ordered,  that  they  shall  respectively  receave  proportionable 
recompence  yearely  for  their  labor,  as  this  Court  shall  determine. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary,  for  his  attendance  on  and  service  to  the  Secrctaryes 
Gennerall  Coiute,  counsell,  and  transcribing  the  acts  of  the  coiiiissioners,  as 
also  for  ti'anscribing  of  letters,  and  all  other  service,  besides  the  bennefitt  of 
transcribing  the  orders  of  the  Gennerall  Coiute  for  the  seuerall  tounes,  the 
suiue  of  forty  pounds  for  this  yeere,  and  so  forward,  and  to  bcginne  at  the 
first  sessions  of  this  Coiute. 

Widdow  Guyes 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Jane  Guy,  widdowe,  for  liberty  and  power  to  answ. 


64 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1G51. 

14  October. 

Major  Den- 
nisons  i^raunt 
of  6)0  acres  of 
land. 


[*62.] 


Milains  sale 
to  Addams 
confirmed. 


5n»  allowed  to 
John  Lewis. 


Issue  of  the 
case  betwecne 
Capt.  John 
AVall  &  M' 
HenryGroome. 


sell  the  howse  and  land  of  Nicholas  Guy,  her  late  husband,  for  the  dlschardge 
of  hir  husbands  debts,  and  hir  owne  more  comfortable  subsistance,  the  Courte 
graunts  hir  request,  and  impowres  hir  to  sell  the  land  accordingly. 

Whereas  this  Courte  did  graunt  vnto  the  toune  of  Rocksbuiy  fower  thou- 
sand acres  of  land,  whereof  two  hundred  sixty  seven  was  assigned  to  M''  W"" 
Dennison,  the  which  he  hath  given  to  his  sonne,  !Majo'^  Dauiell  Dennison,  as 
by  his  deede,  bcaiing  date  21"^  October,  1651,  more  largely  appeares,  att  the 
request  of  the  sajd  Major  Daniell  Dennison,  this  Courte  dotli  graunt,  that  the 
sajd  two  hundred  and  sixty  *seven  acres  shall  be  made  vp  six  hundred  acres 
of  land,  to  be  lajd  out  to  him  where  it  may  be  found  according  to  lawe. 

In  answer  to  the  petiCon  of  John  Milam,  that  whereas  (by  the  order  of 
John  Seaberryes  wife,  late  of  Boston,  w'''  the  approbatjon  of  the  sajd  John 
Seaberry,  as  by  y"^  affidavitt  of  M''  Christopher  Clarke  more  ffuUy  appeares)  he 
made  sale  of  the  bowse  of  the  sajd  Seaberrje  to  Alexander  Addams  for  flbrty 
five  pounds,  thirty  five  pounds  whereof  is  pajd  to  the  sajd  John  Seaberry  and 
his  wife,  the  sajd  John  Seaberry  being  some  whiles  dead,  his  request  being 
that  this  Court  -w^ould  rattify  the  sale  of  the  sajd  howse  to  the  sajd  Addams, 
he  giving  in  security  to  pay  the  remayning  tenn  pounds  to  the  right  heire  on 
all  demands,  the  Court  graunts  the  peticoners  request,  and  judge  it  meet  that 
the  tenn  pounds,  by  security,  from  Alexander  Addams,  be  given  to  the  next 
County  Courte,  to  be  in  a  readjnes  on  all  demands  to  be  deliuered  to  the  true 
heire  of  the  sajd  Seaberry  j  and  heereby  orders,  that  then  the  sajd  howse  tmd 
land  be  confirmed  to  the  sajd  Alexander  Addams,  as  is  desired. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  John  Lewis,  who  desired  the  pajment  of 
fiffty  shillings,  being  by  him  expended  on  INI''^  Elizabeth  Cole  in  the  tjme 
of  hir  extremity,  having  had  encouragement  from  the  Magis*'  therevnto,  itt  is 
ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  sattisfFy  the  sajd  John  Lewis  ffiifty  shillings  out  of 
the  countrje  levy. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Cajit  John  AVall,  a  hearing  of  the  difference 
betweene  the  sajd  John  Wall  and  M'  Henry  Groomc  was  graunted;  and  in  the 
sajd  case,  after  the  ^  had  heard  fully  what  the  partjes  could  say,  the  Courte  de- 
termined that  M""  Henry  Groome,  according  to  the  order  of  the  County  Courte 
in  Cambridg,  should  be  execcutor  to  the  last  will  of  his  brother,  M''  Niccolas 
Groome,  and  that  Capt  Wall  should  surrender  all  the  goods  and  estate  belong- 
ing to  the  sajd  Niccolas  Groome  to  the  sajd  Henry  Groome,  giving  in  security 
to  the  sajd  Capt  John  AValls,  to  save  him  harmelesse  from  all  his  engagements 
to  M''  John  Dauiell,  of  RedrifFe,  one  hundred  and  three  pounds,  whereof 
ffowerteene  shillings  and  tenn  pence  is  sattisfjed  to  the  sajd  Groome  by  the  sajd 
M"'  Wall,  on  accompt ;  and  that  the  attachment  against  Capt  John  Wall,  to 


TIIK    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  65 

answer  the   sijd  Henry  Groome  at  the  next  County  Court  for  the  same,  be      10  51. 

ileHuered  vp  to  the  sajd  John  Wall.  ^'^    ^i        ' 

*In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Ann  Thompson,  late  wife  of  Symon  Crosby,       r^po 

fErst  craving  the  favor  of  tlie  Courte  to  jiardon  hir  ignorance,  and  excuse  the  ^,,5,  to  M- 

poenalty  for  not  prooving  hir  deceased  husbands  will;  2'^,  that  this  honnored  Ann'lhomp- 

sons  petiCon. 
Courte  would  please  to  graunt  vnto  her  the  administration  of  the  goods  and 

chattels  of  her  deceased  husband,  Symon  Crosby;  3'^,  to  confirme  the  por- 

tjons   of  the   children  according   as  they  were  agreed  by  the  Reuerend  M"' 

Shephard,  the  elders  and  deacons  of  Cambridge,  or  so  farr  forth  as  the  Courte 

shall  see  mcete ;  lastly,  that  shee  may  have  power,  or  wliomsoeuer  shee  shall 

appointe,  to  make  sale  of  the  howse  and  land  of  hir  late  husbands,  shee  or 

they  putting  in  securitje  to  the  Courte  for  pajments  of  the  childrens  portions. 

The  Courte,  having  w"'  this  peticon  pervsed  the  agreement  made  by  M"^  Shep- 

heard  and  elders,  and  two  deacons   of  Cambridge,  doe   allow  and   approove 

thereof,  and  ffurther  graunts  hir  power  to  sell  the  howses  and  lands,  provided 

shee  put  into  the  Courte  at  Cambridge  good  securitie  to  pay  the  childrens 

portjons,  and   doe  also   graunt   the   rest   of  the   particculars   in    tliis   peticon 

nienconed. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  'M'  John  Wiiithrop,  craving  the  allowance  of  40"  guift  to  M' 
fifty  pounds  for  his  service  at  the  request  of  the  countryes  agents  in  England,  ,j° '"     '"' 
itt  is  ordered,  that  the  forty  pounds  for  which  the  peticoner  did  engage  for 
Doctor  Child  be  given  him  for  his  implojments  in  England. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  the  toune  of  Newbery,  Capt  Willjam  Cap' Gemsh  to 
Gerrish  is  hereby  authorized  to  marry  such  there  as  shall  be  legally  f'"'"'' "  ®"' 
published. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  M"^  Samuell  Symonds,  the  Courte  graunts  Graunt  of  300 
liim  three  hundred  ackers  of  land,  beyond  the  Riuer  of  ISIerremacke,  where  it  g  ^^^^^ 
maybe   found  in  the  power  of  this   Court  to  graunt,  with  free   liberty  for 
timber,  provided  he  sett  vp  a  sawe  mille  there  w"'in  the  space  of  seven  yeeres.  Ans'  to  George 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  George  Munnings,  keeper  of  the  prison,  that  ^o„""'"^'^^ 
whereas  Edward  Burt  coinenced  a  suite  for  the  escape  of  Capt  Hudson,  and 
recouered  a  judgment  against  him  for  y"  debt  the  sajd  Hudson  owed  the  sajd 
Burt,  the  Court  considering  the  countrje  had  donne  their  endeavors  to 
repajre  the  prison,  they  have  ordered,  that  the  countrje  shall  not  pay  for  the 
escape  of  Cap?  Hudson,  nor  the  keeper,  but  the  judgement  of  the  County 
Court  shallbe,  and  heereby  is,  reuersed  in  such  respect. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  John  Endecott,  Escp,  y*  present  honnored  300  acres  of 
GoQnor,  the  Court  doth  graunt  him  three  hundred  acres  of  woodland,  lying  jj,  Endecott, 
neere  to  the  place  he  intends  to  sett  vp  his  works,  named  Blinde  Hole,  neere  to  "*  ^'J""^  ^°'°- 

VOL.  IV. PART    I.  9 


66 


THE    llECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


1G51. 

U  October. 

[*64.] 

Ans^  to  M' 

Foords  peti- 


M'  Pococks 
ffiffty  pounds 
to  be  allowed 
by  y  Treasu'. 


Ans'  to  the 
petitjon  of 
widdowe 
Lambe,  Isacke 
Heath,  &  John 
Johnson. 


Ans'  to  John 

Witherdens 

petition. 


Ans'  to  Read- 
ing petition. 
Vide  p*  .567. 


Ans'  to  John 

Emorys 

peticon. 


a  fiirme  formerly  graunted  liim,  not  being  graunted  to  any  other,  on  this  con- 
dition, that  he  sett  vp  his  workes  within  seven  yeeres. 

*In  the  case  betweene  M''  Thomas  Foorde  and  Capt  John  AVall,  and  in 
answer  to  his  jietitjon,  after  the  Courte  had  fully  heard  what  the  partjes  could 
say,  the  Courte  determined  that  Capt  John  Wall  should  give  securitje  to 
satisfy  M'^  Thomas  Foorde,  his  heires,  execcutors,  or  assignes,  the  soine  of 
three  thousand  three  hundred  forty  and  one  pounds  weight  of  sugar,  at  the 
Barbadoes,  by  the  last  of  June  next,  abating  fower  p  cent  for  the  payment 
thereof  at  that  tjme  ;  and  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  clarke  of  the  County  Courte 
at  Cambridge  shall  deliver  vp  to  Capl  John  Wall,  or  his  assignes,  the  originall 
bond  which  was  delivered  with  the  sajd  Courte ;  and  for  the  chardges  of  the 
Courte  for  the  tjme  expended  in  hearing  the  cawse,  the  Courte  is  willing  to 
reiuitt  it,  being  they  were  both  straungers,  and  not  above  two  howres 
in  hearing. 

In  answer  to  a  letter  from  M'  John  Pococke  to  INI'  Peeters,  wherein  it 
appeared  the  countrje  owed  the  sajd  51'"  Pococke  ffiffty  pounds,  itt  is  ordered, 
that  the  Treasurer  shall  pay  M^  Poco?:ke  ffiflty  pounds,  in  sattisfaction 
thereof. 

In  answer  to  the  petitjon  of  Dorothy  Lambe,  of  Roxbury,  elder  Isacke 
Heath,  and  John  Johnson,  craving  the  coiifirmatjon  of  the  sale  of  a  smale 
parcell  of  vpland  and  meadow,  contajning  tliree  quarters  of  an  acre,  more  or 
lesse,  sometjme  belonging  to  Thomas  Lambe,  deceased,  by  whom  made  vnto 
W"  Parkes,  W"  Cheny,  Thomas  Baker,  and  Mary  Woodey,  wife  of  John 
Woodey,  late  deceased,  the  Courte  grauuts  theii-  request,  &  confirmes  the  sajd 
sale  accordingly. 

In  answer  to  the  petitjon  of  John  Witherden,  the  Coru-te  doth  order  that 
the  petitioner  shall  have  his  execution  graunted  against  M""  Aspinwall,  and 
that  he  shall  have  his  bill  of  costs  of  two  pounds  sixteene  shillings,  vnlesse  M'' 
Aspinwall  produce  the  determination  of  that  Courte  that  did  abate  the  same, 
vuder  M''  Nowells  ;  and  ffurther,  that  INI''  Aspinwall  shall  pay  the  petitioner 
his  bill  of  chardges  for  his  attendance  and  his  wittnesses  for  seven  dayes  vppon 
this  Courte,  amounting  to  two  pounds  thirteene  shillings. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  toune  of  Heading, 
craving  -the  addition  of  two  miles,  or  thereabouts,  of  land  adjoyning  to  their 
bounds,  of  fowre  miles,  and  lying  betweene  M'^  Bellinghams  farme  and  the 
great  riuer,  the  Courte  grannts  the  petitioners  request,  so  as  it  hath  not  binn 
already  graunted  to  any  toune  or  person,  nor  prejudicing  any  former  graunt 
to  any. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Jolm  Emory,  the  Court  graunts  his  request. 


14  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  67 

and  hereby  gives  him  power  to  sell  the  howse  and  lands  mentioned  in  his      16  51. 
peticbn,  so  as  he  gives  securitje  to  the  County  Courte  at  Ipswich  to  pay  the 
children  the  full  prize  the  land  shall  be  sould  for,  and  make  y"  three  childrens 
twenty  nobles  a  peece,  eight  pounds  a  peece,  and  pay  the  daughters  their  por- 
tjons  at  eighteene  yeeres,  and  the  sonnes  at  twenty  one. 

*In  answer  to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Newbery,  the  Court  allowes  and       [*65.]   • 
approoves  of  their  chojce  to  Benjamin  Swett  to  be  ensigne  to  their  millitary  2'^"-  Swett, 

ensigo  to  New- 

company,  &  confirmes  him  in  that  place.'  beny  comp. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  toune  of  Douer  shallbe,  and  heerby  is,  fined  tenn  Douer  fined 
pounds  for  their  neglect  in  not  sending  a  deputy  to  this  Comt  the  last  ses- 
sions, nor  this  neither,  which  fine,  at  the  request  of  M'^  Maude,  is  respited 
from  being  levyed  till  the  next  Courte  of  Eleccon,  that  the  Court  may  judge 
of  Douers  answer. 

Vppon  the  motjon  of  the  deputy  of  Springfeild  in  behalfe  of  their  tonne,  Springfeiids 
itt  is  ordered,  that  the  inhabitants  of  Springfeild,  aforesajd,  shall  be  at  their  ^  aepiity  to  y 
liberty  whether  they  A^-ill  send  any  deputy  to  the  latter  session  of  this  Courte  '"°"*  °^ 

•'  •'  J         i       J  ElecCononly.if 

from  yeare  to  ycare.  they  will. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  M'  Thomas  Gayncr,  craving  releife  in  five  Ans'  to  M' 

Gajners  pe- 

things,  —  1,  for  execution  for  the  twenty  nine  pounds  seven  shillings  nine  ticon. 
pence  ;  2'^,  for  twenty  fewer  pounds  five  shillings  sixepcnce,  pajd  the  sajd 
M'  Aspinwall  and  M"'  Bendall,  as  they  say,  by  contract,  for  attournyshipp  & 
trouble  for  the  seamen  ;  S^^,  that  the  sajd  M"'  Aspinwall  &  M'"  Bendall  may  give 
in  an  accompt  vppon  oath  ;  4"''^,  that  they  bring  in  recejpts  for  what  they  pajd  ; 
5'^,  that  he  may  have  liberty  to  sue  the  sajd  M'  Aspinwall  &  M''  Bendall  at 
coinon  law,  —  the  Courte  declares  to  the  first,  that,  although  M''  Gayner  hath 
receaved  ffive  pounds  thereof,  yett  he  shewes  no  right  he  hath  to  it  to  de- 
maund  the  same  ;  to  the  second,  that  they  see  not  that  any  thing  ^  that  per- 
tajneth  to  him  thereof;  to  the  S'^,  that  M"^  Aspinwall  &  M'  Bendall  hath 
donn  so  ;  by  the  testimony  of  M'  Nowell,  to  the  4"^,  there  is  a  receipt  and 
dischardge  from  the  seamen  to  ^Majo"^  Gennerall  Edward  Gibbens  on  record ; 
to  the  fifth,  the  lawe  is  open  for  him,  having  cawse  and  power  to  sue  by. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Richard  Swajne,  W™  Swajne,  and  other  of  Ans'  to 
the  toune  of  Hampton,  itt  is  ordered,  that  whatsoeucr  goods  or  lands  have  petiCon. 
binn  taken  away  fi-om  any  of  the  inhabitants  of  Hampton  by  Edward  Calcord 
or  John  Samborne,  vppon  pretence  of  being  authorized  by  M'  Batchelor,  either 
with  or  without  execution,  shall  be  retourned  to  them  from  whom  it  was 
taken,  and  the  execution  to  be  called  in,  and  no  more  to  be  graunted  vntill 
there  appeare  sufficijent  power  from  M"'  Batchilor  to  recouer  the  same  to  the 
County  Courts,  either  of  Salisbury  or  Hampton. 


68 


THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1651. 

14  October. 
Koger  Shawes 
power. 


[*66.] 

M'  Aspinwallg 


23  October. 


Record'  of  the 
county  of 
Suffolke. 


Boston  clarke 
of  the  writts. 


Ans'  to  Capt. 
Eauthorne. 


4"  to  Cap' 

AUen. 


Ans'  to  Cap' 
Keajne  &  M' 
Newgates 
peticon. 


Whereas  the  survejor  gennerall  did  arest  Roger  Shawe,  of  Harapton,  for 
eight  pounds,  for  a  barrcll  of  pouder  ■which  was  dew  to  tlic  countrje  from  the 
tonne  of  Hampton,  and  the  sajd  Koger  Shawe  did  acknowledge  a  judgement 
for  the  same,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  sajd  Eoger  Shawe  shall  have  power 
to  make  a  levy  on  the  inhabitants  of  Hampton  for  the  payment  thereof 
forthwith. 

*In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  John  Butten,  Benja  Ward,  Thomas  Matson, 
Willjam  Liidkin,  and  others  of  a  jury  appointed  to  serve  in  the  last  County 
Court  held  at  Boston,  in  an  accbn  betweene  M'  W"  Aspinwall  and  John  With- 
erden,  the  Courte  doth  order  that  M"'  Aspinwall  bo  convented  before  the  whole 
Courte  on  the  morrow,  being  23  8&,  1651,  to  give  answer  to  such  things  as 
are  chardged  vppon  him  in  tliis  and  Witherdens  peticon.  The  partjes  ap- 
peared at  the  time  appointed,  and  after  the  Court  had  fully  heard  the  cawse, 
and  what  both  partjes  could  say,  the  Court  proceeded  to  judgm"'.  Itt  is  or- 
dered, that  henceforth  M''  W"  Aspinwall  shall  be  suspended  from  cxcercising 
the  office  of  recorder  or  clarke  in  any  County  Courte,  for  chardging  the  Courte 
and  jury  to  goe  against  lawe  and  conscience,  making  the  landlord  to  pay  rent 
to  the  tennant,  and  shall  pay  the  soiric  of  thirty  shillings  for  the  jurjcs  at- 
tendance and  entring  the  peticon,  w"*  fowcr  shillings  for  two  wittnesses 
attendance. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  M"^  Edward  Rawson,  present  secretary  to  the  Gen- 
nerall Courte,  shall  henceforth  be  recorder  for  the  county  of  Suffolke,  and  that 
M"'  Aspinwall  deliuer  him  all  the  records  belonging  to  the  sajd  county. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Jonathan  Negus,  at  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Bos- 
ton, shall  henceforth  be  clarke  of  the  writts  for  the  toune  of  Boston,  in  M' 
Aspinwalls  roorae,  who  is  to  give  him  the  records  of  deaths,  births,  and  mar- 
rjages,  in  his  hands,  y*  belongs  to  that  office. 

In  answer  to  the  request  of  Capt  Willjam  Hauthorne,  the  Court,  for  and 
in  consideration  of  the  twenty  pounds  dew  to  him,  as  coiiiissioner,  for  this 
yeares  service,  doth  graunt  to  the  sajd  Capt  Hawthorne  and  his  heires  all  that 
parcell  of  land  this  Courte  bought  of  M''  Knowles,  lying  in  Kittery,  and  abut- 
ting on  Piscattaq,  Riuer. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Capt  Bozoone  Allen  for  the  rebating  of  what 
the  Court  should  see  meet  of  tenn  pounds  and  five  shillings  the  survejor 
genn''  recouered  of  him  for  a  barrell  of  pouder  w'^'^  the  toune  of  Hingham 
had  of  the  countrjes,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  allowe  the  sajd 
Capt  Allen  fewer  pounds  out  of  the  countrje  levy  in  sattisfaccon  of  what  was 
taken  from  him. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  John  Newgate,  John  Coggan,  Robert  Keajne, 


r 

23  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  69 

Samuell  Cole,  Niccolas  Parker,  and  other  inhabitants  of  Runny  Marish,  itt  is      1  G  5  1 . 

ordered,  that  if  the  peticSners  shall  refuse  to  lay  out  twenty  acres  of  good 

planting  ground,  in  a  convenient  place,  for  Sagamore  George  to  make  vsc  of, 

that  then  the  sajd  sagamore  is  permitted  the  bcnnefitt  of  the  lawe  to  recouer 

what  right  he  hath  to  the  land,  provided  the  peticouers  shall  have  the  *refusall       [*6T.] 

thereof  when  euer  the  sagamore  shall  sell  the  sajue. 

Whereas,  in  the  yeare  1650,  there  was  a  coinittee  chosen  to  pervse  a  A  coffiittee 
booke  called  Lex  Mercatorja,  to  extract  such  lawes  from  thence  as  might  be  MeiCorja. 
suiteable  for  our  vse  in  this  coiiion-wealth,  which  sajd  coinittee  have  not 
yett  mett  according  as  was  then  concluded,  that  the  sajd  order  may  be  further 
prosecuted,  itt  is  ordered  by  tlais  Courte,  that  the  accomplishing  of  that  worke 
shall  be  referred  to  M"  Nowell  and  the  auditor  gennerall,  who  are  heereby 
chosen  a  coiiiittee,  and  desired  to  pvse  the  sajd  booke,  and  to  collect  from 
thence  such  lawes  as  they  shall  judge  meete  for  our  vse,  according  as  that 
order  doth  direct,  and  to  make  retourne  to  the  next  Gennerall  Courte. 

In  answer  to  the  petioon  of  Thomas  Venner,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Ven-  Ans'to  M' 
ncrs  vessell  shall  be  freed  from  'M"  Gajners  attachment,  provided  the  sajd  M''  -J^^  "  ^* '" 
Venner,  or  whomsoeuer  else  it  concernes,  give  in  security  to  the  valew  of  one 
bundled  pounds,  to  be  responsall  to  answer  M"'  Gayner  in  the  action  in  the 
next  County  Courte. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  the  toune  of  Hingham,  the  Court  doth  hcere-  Lef  Hubbard 
by  authorize  Leftennant  Joshua  Hubbard  to  marry  such  persons  as  shall  be  jjj^j'j^^^ 
there  legally  published. 

In  answer  to   the  peticon  of  Susanna  Rashlejgh,   desiring   this   Courts  Ans'  to  M" 
graunt  of  a  free  estate  and  title  vnto  the  howse  and  lands  of  hir  late  husband,  ^j^^ 
whereby  shee  may  be  inabled  to  dispose  thereof  for  the  best  advantage  and 
good,  w'^''  the  Court  graunted. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Anna  Palsgrave,  of  Chai'lstoune,  widdow,  Ans'  to  M" 
desiring  the  confirmation  of  liir  late  husbands  estate,  Richard  Palgrave,  de-  tiCou" 
ceased,  to  hir  and  hir  heires  for  euer,  according  to  the  desire  and  jntent  of  the 
testator,  to  prevent  future  trouble  and  contentjon  that  might  otherwise  ensue, 
the  Comt  graunts  hir  request. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Strawberry  Bancke,  the  M'  Ambrose 
Courte  graunts  the  peticoners  all  the  land  betweene  Hampton  and  them  that  comission  at 
is   not  already  graunted  to   tounes   or   persons,  Squamscott  pattent  excepted.  Strawberry 
2'"y.     That  M''  Ambrose   Lane,  M'^  Brjan  Pendelton,  and  Heniy  Sherborne 
are  heereby  for  one  whole  yeere  jnvested  with  ample  power,  and  be  enabled  as 
associates  w"'  Capt  Thomas  Wiggin,  to  keepe  one  Courte  in  a  yeere  at  Strawc- 
beriy  Bancke,  viz.,  at  such  tjme  as  Capt  Wiggins  shall  appointe,  to  trye  all 
civill  &  criminall  acc6ns,  as  other  thelre  Cotirts  within  this  jurisdiccon  doth ;  as 


70  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


2J  October. 
[*68.] 


1  G  5  1 .  also  the  three  aforesaid  coiiiissione",  or  each  of  them,  shall  have  power  to  admin- 
ister oathes,  keepe  the  peace  amongst  the  inhabitants,  *and  to  graunt  warrants 
to  bring  before  them  such  as  shall  break  the  pcenall  lawes,  the  pocnaltjes 
whereof  exceede  not  fforty  shillings,  and  all  offenders,  whose  pocualty  shall 
exceede  the  soiiie  aforesajd,  to  binde  ouer  to  the  County  Courte,  or  send  them 
to  some  magis'^  to  be  provided  with,  according  to  lawe ;  and  they  have  fur- 
ther power  to  end  smale  cawses,  as  three  men  in  tonnes  have ;  and  for  what 
else  is  mentioned  in  the  petition,  the  Courte  referrs  it  to  the  next  Gennerall 
Courte  of  ElecctSn,  to  be  considered  and  determined,  provided  they  have  or 
shall  take  the  oath  of  fldellitje  to  this  gouerument  before  they  act  according  to 
this  coinission. 
Kyttery  w'tin  Whereas,  by  the  extent  of  the  Ijne  of  our  pattent,  it  doth  appeare  that  the 

ourpa  n  ,^  c.  ^^^^^^g  ^^  Kyttery,  and  many  miles  to  the  northward  thereof,  is  comprehended 
within  our  graunt,  and  forasmuch  as  this  Courte  hath  binn  jnformed  that  there 
hath  binn  a  late  endeavor  of  seuerall  ^sersons  thereabouts  to  drawe  the  inhabit- 
ants of  Kettery,  &d,  who  gouerne  now  by  combjnation,  to  pcticon  the  Parlja- 
ment  of  England  for  a  graunt  of  the  sajd  place,  which  the  major  parte  of  the 
inhabittants  refused  to  doe,  many  of  them  expressing  their  willingness  rather  to 
submitt  themselves  to  the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts,  this  Courte,  tak- 
ing into  consideration  the  premisses,  togeather  with  the  comodjousnes  of  the 
Riuer  of  Piscataque,  and  how  prejudicjall  it  would  be  to  this  gouernment  if  the 
aforesajd  place  and  riuer  should  be  possessed  by  such  as  are  no  freinds  to  vs, 
hath  ordered,  that  a  loving  letter,  and  friendly,  be  sent  from  this  Courte  to  the 
sajd  inhabitants  of  Kettery,  &5,  acquainting  them  with  our  foresajd  right,  &d, 
and  coinission  graunted  to  M""  Symon  Bradstreete,  Major  Daniell  Dennison, 
and  Capt  W'"  Hauthorne,  to  treate  w"^  them,  and,  according  to  instruccous 
given,  to  receive  them  vnder  this  gouernment,  if  tcrmes  of  agrement  cann  be 
concluded  vppon  by  mutuall  consent ;  otherwise,  having  made  knoune  our  right, 
and  lajd  clajme  to  the  i^lace,  to  protest  against  any  further  proceeding  by  virtue 
of  their  combinacon,  or  any  other  interest  w'soeuer,  coiiiisson  was  graunted  to 
y«  gent  abovcmentioncd,  &  a  letter  sent  w'''  instruccons  w'''»  are  in  the  Court 
booke  of  records  for  letters,  &6. 
Maidens  trjaii.  Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  whole  Coiui  meete  together  on  the  morrow,  being 

24  October,  o^  of  the  eighth  month,  at  one  of  the  clocke,  about  jSP  Mathewes  his  offence 
retourned  by  the  coinittee,  as  also  the  offence  of  the  church  of  Maiden,  and  to 
that  end  that  M'  Hills  give  notice  accordingly.  Att  the  tjme  appointed,  'M' 
Marmaduke  Mathewes  appeard ;  so  did  INI"'  Joseph  Hill,  Edward  Carrington,  and 
John  Waite,  w"'  seuerall  others  of  the  church  of  Maiden,  &  on  the  churches 
behalfe  appeared  to  answer  their  offence,  &d,  according  to  the  order  of  the  last 
Gennerall  Courte. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  71 


24  October. 

[*69.] 

Courts  order  in 


*M'  Mathewes  appearing,  and  not  giving  the  Court  sattisfacGbn  by  their      1  G51. 
comittee,  or  otherwise,  for  his  errors  formerly  deliuered,  and  for  which  this 
Court  had  dealt  with  him,  the  Courte  dechu'ed,  that,  although  the  civill  and 
churches   powers   may  proceed   concerning   offenders  in  their   seuerall  wajes 
without  interfering  one  with  another,  yett  in  this  case,  vppon  some  considera-  M'  Mathews 

case. 

tjons,  they  judge  it  doth  staud  with  wisedome  to  have  the  churches  to  acte 
before  themselves,  and  therefore  they  thinke  meete,  and  doe  appointe  the 
chui'ch  of  IMaldeu  speedily  to  consider  of  the  errors  M"^  Mathewes  stands 
chardged  with  in  C'ourte  ;  and  in  case,  vppon  the  churches  dealing  with  him, 
he  doth  acknowledge  his  errors  and  vusafe  expressions,  and  give  sattisfaccon 
vnder  his  hand,  so  as  the  secretaiy,  being  certifjed  thereof,  doe  acquainte  the 
counsell  therewith  within  sixe  weekes,  the  matter  at  present  may  so  rest,  else 
the  secretary  shall  give  notice  vnto  the  churches  of  Cambrjdge,  Charles 
Toune,  Lynn,  and  Redding  to  send  their  messengers  in  way  of  counsell  and 
advice  vnto  the  church  of  Maiden,  and  not  excluding  any  other  churches  with 
them,  to  debate  the  doctrines  there  deliuered  by  M''  Mathewes,  and  now  in 
quajstion,  that  by  this  meanes  the  truth  may  the  better  appeare ;  and  that  they 
prosecute  the  same  to  effect  according  to  the  rule  of  Christ,  for  the  conviction 
of  il''  jNIathewes,  and  helpfuUnes  of  the  church  of  Maiden. 

The  Courte,  having  considered  and  pervsed  the  answer  of  the  church  of  church  of 
Maiden,  touching  those  things  wherein  they  had  given  offence,  are  not  sattis- 
fyed  therewith,  and  doe  therefore  judge,  and  orders,  that  the  members  of  the 
church  of  Maiden  shallbe  fjned,  for  their  ofi'ences,  the  soiiie  of  fiffty  pounds, 
wliich  shall  not  extend  to  any  person  that  hath  given  this  Courte  sattisfactjon, 
and  that  consented  not  to  ISI"'  [Mathewes  ordjnatjon.  And  itt  is  fiuther 
ordered,  that  the  sajd  ffiffty  pounds  shall  be  levjed  by  executjon  on  the  estates 
of  M''  Joseph  Hills,  Edward  Carrington,  and  John  "VVajte,  who  are  hereby 
impowred  to  make  proportion  of  the  sajd  soiue  on  the  rest  of  the  members  of 
the  church,  except  before  excepted. 

Itt   is   ordered,  that  the  judgment  graimted  at  the  first  session  of  this  Execution 
Court  against  M'^  Marmaduke  Mathewes,   for   tenn   pounds,   the    execution  >?,''',"'' 
thereof  shallbe  respitted  till  other  goodcs  appeare  besides  bookes.  respitted. 

A  letter   to  the   Gouernor,  from  Mouns''  S°'  j\Iaze,  was   read  in  Court,  i^  cndinc^ 
wherein  complaints  were  made  against  Capt  Lane  and  M"'  Jotham  Gibbens,  for  „      if  ""  .' 
injuryes  by  them  donne  him,  w'''  the  Courte   considered  of,  examined,  and  piajnts. 
retourned  answer,  which  fFully  appeares  in  the  booke  for  the  Court  records  for 
letters,  &&,  w"*  commission  &  warrant  to  the  marshall  of  Hampton  to  appre- 
hend the  sajd  Sampson  Lane,  if  w"'in  our  jiuisdiccon. 

*In  ans"'  to  the  peticon   of  Nathaniell  Edwards,  who  presented  to  this        [*70.] 


72 


THE    llECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OP 


1G51. 

24  October. 
Ans'  to  Nathan 
Edwards  pe- 
ticon. 


M'  Hubbards 

commission, 

&c. 


M'  Smiths 
dismission,  &c. 


County  Courts 
adjournment. 


Judgement  of 
Court  in  M' 
Pinchons  case 
suspended  till 
May  next. 


M'  Nortons 
ans'  to  M*^ 
Pinchons 
booke  to  be 
printed. 

[*71.] 

Lett'  to  y 
Parliam*. 


Court  a  will,  made  by  one  Nathaniell  Smith,  and  therewithal!  seuerall  testi- 
moiijes,  to  proove  that  the  sajd  will  was  confirmed  and  allowed  by  the  Praerog 
ative  Courte  in  England,  which,  vjipon  pervsall  thereof,  this  Court  doth  also 
declare  the  sajd  will  to  be  legall,  and  approove  thereof;  and  doe  also  order, 
that  the  sajd  Nathaniell  Edwards  shall  putt  in  caution  to  the  next  County 
Court,  holden  at  Boston,  to  be  responsall  for  all  the  estate  of  the  sajd  Smith, 
lying  within  this  jurisdiccon,  in  case  the  sajd  will  should  heereafter  be 
reversed. 

At  the  request  of  M'  Phillips,  of  Rowley,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M"^  W'^  . 
Hubbard,  Seil,  of  Ipswich,  shall  be,  &  is  hereby,  impowred  to  marry  the  sajd 
M'^  Phillips,  who  hath  binn  thrice  published,  as  the  lawe  requires. 

]M'^  Henry  Smith,  the  deputy  of  Springfeild,  having  a  long  journey  to 
travell,  and  vrgent  occasions  to  retourne  home,  vppon  his  request,  is  dismissed 
from  his  fuither  attendance  on  the  service  of  this  Courte. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  County  Court  of  Suffolk,  w"""  is  to  begin  on  the  28 
of  this  instant  eighth  month,  shall  be  adjourned  to  the'  18  of  the  9  iSi,  by  rea- 
son of  the  Gennerall  Courts  occasions. 

The  Courte  doth  judge  it  meete,  and  is  willing,  that  all  patjence  be  excer- 
sised  towards  M''  William  Pinchon,  that,  if  it  be  possible,  he  may  be  reduced 
into  the  way  of  truth,  and  that  he  might  renounce  the  errors  and  haerassies 
published  in  his  booke;  and,  for  that  end,  doe  give  him  time  to  the  next 
Gennerall  Courte,  in  May,  more  thoroughly  to  consider  of  the  sajd  errors  and 
haersesies  in  his  sajd  booke,  and  well  to  weigh  the  judicjous  answer  of  M"^  John 
Norton,  and  that  he  may  give  full  sattisfaction  for  his  offence,  which  they 
more  desire  then  to  proceed  to  so  great  a  censiu'e  as  his  offence  deserves.  In 
case  he  should  not  give  good  satisfaction,  the  Courte  doth  therefore  order, 
that  the  judgement  of  the  cawse  be  suspended  till  the  honnorable  Court  in 
May  next,  and  that  M'  W""  Pinchon  be  enjoyned,  vnder  the  pocnalty  of  one 
hundred  pounds,  to  make  liis  personall  appearance  at  and  before  the  next 
Gennerall  Courte,  to  give  a  full  answer  to  sattisfaction,  if  it  maybe,  or  other- 
wise to  stand  to  the  judgement  and  censure  of  the  Courte. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  the  answ^er  to  M""  Pinchons  booke, 
written  by  My  John  Norton,  shallbe  sent  to  England  to  be  printed. 

*M"'  Winslow,  writing  a  letter  to  Thomas  Dudley,  Esq),  as  Gouerno"",  to 
be  imparted  to  the  Gennerall  Court,  which  was  donne,  in  which  he  imparted, 
as  he  affirmed,  the  committee  of  states  minde  respecting  the  gouernment  of  the 
seuerall  jurisdiccons  in  New  England,  and  therein  declaring  an  answer  was 
expected,  which  this  Courte,  considering  of,  retourned,  not  only  an  ans''  to  M' 
Winslowes  letter,  but  directed  a  petitjon  to  the  most  honnorable  Parljament  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  73 

England;   all  which  are  amply  recorded  amongst  the  bookes  of  the  Court      1651. 
records  for  letters,  &d;  as   also   the  Courte  directed  a  letter   to   the   Right    *"     ^     ~' 
Honno'able  Oliuer  Cromwell,  Lord  Gennerall  of  the  Parljaments  forces  in 
England  and  Scotland,  which  is  likewise  there  recorded. 

This  Courte,  having  past  a  declaration  and  order  respecting  their  right  Kittery. 
and  title  to  Kittery,  &6,  du-ected  a  letter  to  Edward  Godfrey,  Es^,  M'  Nicco- 
las  Shaplejgh,  &6,  accordingly,  which  is  recorded  in  their  booke  of  letters. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  M"^  Symon  Bradstreet,  Major  Daniell  Dennison,  and  M'  Bradstreet 
Cap?  W™  Hauthorne,  whom  this  Courte  hath  chosen  and  appointed  as  their  comission^^"" 
coinissioners  to  treate  with  the  gen?  to  the  eastward,  shall  be,  and  hereby  is, 
impowred  to  mannage  and  conclude  the  buiseues  with  the  sajd  gen?  to  the 
eastward,  as  in  their  best  judgments  and  discretjons  they  shall  judge  meete. 

Whereas  the  Courte  and  juiy  did  not  agree  in  John  Crossmans  case,  who  Courts  sen- 
is  now  in  prison  for  blasphemy,  and  so  it  necessarily  comes  to  this  Court  to  be  ^an  for  bias- 
determined,  itt  is  ordered,  that  that  case  be  heard  before  the  whole  Courte  on  P'^'^'^y- 
the  morrow,  by  nine  of  the  clock  in  tlie  morning,  being  28""  of  the  8  ifi,     28  October. 
1651.     Att  the  tjme  appointed,  the  prisoner  was  brought  before  the  whole 
Courte,  the  evidences  against  him  was  read,  and  itt  was  ordered,  that  John 
Crossman,  for  vttering    blasphemy  against    God,  as    was    prooved,  shall    be 
seuerely  whipped,  and  branded  on  the  forehead,  with  a  hott  iron,  with  the 
letter  B,  presently  after  the  lecture  in  Boston,  the  .30"^  of  this  instant  October, 
and  be  bannished  out  of  this  jurisdiccon  for  euer,  from  the  20"^  of  Nouember 
next,  not  to  retourne  at  his  perill. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  on  the  second  Tuesday  in  the  S"*  month  next,  there  Court  of  Asist- 
shall  be  a  Courte  of  Asistants  held  at  Boston,  for  the  trjall  of  those  in  prison  suspected  for 
accused  for  witchcraft,  and  that  the  most  materiall  wittnesses  at  Springfeild  be  ^t'^^'^^ft- 
sumoned  to  the  Court  of  Asistants,  to  give  in  their  evidence  against  them 
accordingly. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  M''  Leaders  case,  which  was  referred  to  this  session,       [*"~-] 
shallbe  heard  on  the  morrow,  by  eight  of  the  clock  in  the  morning,  being  30"^  ^'  ^"^^^^^  ^^- 

'     •'       °  D'  o  charged,  &c. 

8  m,  1651,  and  that  notice  be  given  to  the   sajd  M'  Leader  to   attend  the 

Courte.     Att  the  tjnae  appointed,  M'  Leader  appeared,  and  it  was  putt  to  the     30  October. 

qusestion,  whither  M'  Leader  should  be    responsall  for  what  was  evidenced 

against  him  by  Theodore  Atkinson  and  Willjara  Wilcoks,  the  Avords  being 

spoken  in  the  midst  of  the  sea  going  hence  to  England.     Itt  was  resolved  on 

the  negative ;  and  so  he  was  freed  from  his  bonds  for  his  appearance  and 

good  behaviour.  „  _.   . 

"  Cbnussioners 

Vppon  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Hampton,  M'  Samuel  Winslow,  *"  ^^y  °"' 

.  Hamptoa 

M''  Thomas  Bradbury,  and  Left  Robt  Pike,  or  any  two  of  them,  are  appointed  bounds. 

VOL.    IV. TART    I.  10 


74 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1651. 


30  October. 


Fire  muskets 
dischaidged. 


coiuissioners  to  lay  out  the  west  end  of  their  touiie  lyne  towards  Exetur,  and 
to  make  retourne  thereof  to  the  next  Court  of  Elcccon,  provjdcd  Exetiu* 
have  tjmely  notice  of  the  tjrae  when  it  is  to  be  donnc,  to  the  end  they  may 
have  Hberty  to  make  their  objeccons. 

There  being  seuerall  armes  long  since  lost  in  the  hands  of  some  of  the 
hiliabitauts  of  Salem,  which  did  appertajne  to  the  countrje,  of  which  fower 
were  burnt  in  the  hands  of  INI''  Gafford,  and  one  being  in  the  hands  of  our 
present  honnored  Gouernor,  w''''  sajd  five  musketts,  for  seuerall  reasons,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  they  should  neuer  be  required  at  their  hands. 


Sudbury  2 
miles. 


According  to  an  order  of  Court  about  three  yeares  since,  that  the  toune 
of  Sudbury  should  have  two  miles  iulargement  vppon  theire  west  Ijne,  &  that 
I,  whose  name  is  vnder  written,  was  appointed  by  this  Courte  to  see  the  sajd 
land  lajd  forth  according  thereunto,  I  doe  heereby  informe  the  Courte,  that 
the  thing  is  donne  according  to  the  order  of  the  Court.  Wittnes  my  hand, 
22'"  8  I?!,  1651. 

SIMON  WILLARD. 


The  Courte  approved  of  this  retourne. 


Ans'  to  Cathe- 
rine Haugh- 
tons  pet. 


[*73.] 

Survejors  al- 
lowance. 


M'  Dunsters 
coiuission  to 
marry,  Sec. 


M'  Pocockes 
60". 


In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Katherlne  Haughton,  late  wife  to  Niccolas  Char- 
lett,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  peticoner  shall  have  power  to  sell  the  sajd  howse 
mentioned  in  hir  peticon,  to  sattisfy  the  debts,  as  is  desired  ;  and  administration 
is  graunted  hir  to  the  sajd  Charletts  estate,  and  what  remajnes  of  the  nine- 
teene  pounds  in  the  inventory  exprest  should  be  to  liir  bennefitt,  for  bringing 
vp  the  two  childi-en. 

*The  Courte,  taking  notice  of  the  contjnewed  pajnes  and  faithfuU  en- 
deavors of  il'  John  Johnson  in  the  place  of  the  survejor  gennerall,  looking  to 
the  countrjes  armes,  and  procuring  many  of  the  countrjes  debts,  doe  order, 
that  he  shall  be  allowed  five  pounds  p  annum  for  his  pajnes,  from  the  tjme  of 
the  Courts  last  allowance  to  him,  and  from  this  tjme  forwards  five  pounds  p 
annu  for  his  pajnes  in  that  implojment. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Cap?  Daniell  Gooking,  M^  Joseph  Cooke,  or  M"' 
Henry  Dunster,  shallbe,  and  is  heereby,  impowred  to  marry  M'  John  Apleton 
and  M"  PrisciUa  Glover,  who  have  been  published  at  Cambridge,  according 
to  lawe. 

Wliereas  itt  appeares  vnto  this  Courte,  vppon  examinatjon  of  accounts,  that 
the  countrje  is  debtor  to  jNI''  Pococke,  in  England,  the  soiiie  of  fifty  pounds, 
formerly  disbmsed  for  and  towards  the  vse  and  bennefitt  of  the  countrje,  that 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  75 

due  sattisfaction  may  be  made,  as  is  desired,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that      1  G  5  1 . 
M''  Winslow  shall,  and    heereby  is,  both  authorized  and  intreated  to  make    '       ^'        ' 

.  30  October. 

sattisfaccon  to  the  sajd  M^"  Pococke,  by  such  wajcs  and  meanes  as  shall  present, 
and  that  the  Treasm-er  shall  repay  it  againe  here  to  whom  INI"^  Winslow  shall 
appoint. 

Whereas  the  Gennerall  Courte,  in  the  beginning  of  the  toiuie  of  Dedham,  Dedham 
graunted  vnto  the  inhabitants  thereof  a  tract  of  land,  five  miles  square,  vppon 
the  north  side  of  Charles  River  ;  but  afterwards,  vppon  the  laying  out  of  Water 
Toune  Ijne,  it  did  appeare  that  there  was  not  roome  there  left  for  the  former 
grauut  made  to  Dedham,  to  lye  in  that  square  forme  before  expressed, 
wherevppou  another  grauut  was  made  by  the  Gennerall  Courte,  dated  22*  of 
the  3'  month,  16-39,  ordering,  that  the  sajd  tract  of  land  should  be  lajd  out 
to  runne  along  so  as  the  foresajd  quantitje  should  be  taken  in  according  as 
the  place  would  beare ;  in  which  order,  also,  one  clawse  doth  restrajne  the 
Ijne  that  it  shall  not  come  within  two  miles  of  Chochittawate  Pondes ;  but 
now,  vppon  experience  and  testimony  presented  in  this  Courte,  it  doth  appeare 
that  the  foresajd  ponds  are  within  lesse  than  two  miles  of  Charles  Riuer,  by 
reason  whereof  the  sajd  tract  of  5  miles  square  cannot  be  taken  there  according 
to  the  graunt,  —  this  Court,  in  consideratjon  of  the  premisses,  doe  order,  that  the 
foresajd  clawse,  restrajning  the  Ijne  not  to  come  within  two  miles  of  the  afore- 
sajd  ponds,  be  made  of  none  effect,  but  that  the  aforesajd  graunt  or  tract  of 
land  be  lajd  out  according  as  the  place  was  then  capable  at  that  time  when  the 
graunt  was  made,  provided  that  Water  Toune  Ijne  be  not  hindered  thereby. 

*Henry  Chickering,  a  deput  for  the  toune  of  Dedham,  vppon  his  request,       r*74.] 
having  vrgent  occasions,  is  dismist  the  Courte  for  this  sessions,  there  being 
another  deputy  for  the  same  toune  here. 

In  aus''  to  the  petition  of  M'  Simon  Bradstreete  and  Cap?  Thomas  Wig-  looo  acres 
gin,  the   Courte  graunts  the  jjeticoners  a  thowsand    acres    of  land    on    the  Bradstrcet& 
Neewwhichawanicke  River,  to  them  and  their  heires  for  euer,  with  libertje  to  ^^^'  Wiggms. 
make  vse  of  any  tjniber,  for  the  vse  of  their  sawemill,    whilst  the  land  re- 
majnes  comon. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  M''  John  Elljott,  and  vppon  the  motjon  of  the  Ans'  to  M' 
inhabitants  of  Dedham,  tendring  the  furtherance  of  the  Indian  plantation  at  petiCon. 
Naticke,  to  allow  them  two  thousand  acres  within  their  bounds,  provided  they 
lay  doune  all  clajmes  in  that  toune  elswhere,  and  sett  no  trapps  in  vninclosed 
ground,  this  Courte,  approoving  their  tender  therein,  doth  order,  that  the 
deputjes  of  Dorchester,  Roxbmy,  Water  Toune,  Cambridge,  and  Sudbury, 
together  with  the  deputjes  of  Dedham,  shall  be  a  coiiiittee  to  consider  and  act 
further  therein  ;  and  that  in  case  M''  Elljott  shall,  in  the  behalfe  of  the  Indjans, 


76 


THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1651. 


30  October. 


Hauerill 
bounds. 


Ans'  to  M' 

Dudley 

peticon. 


Xtopher  Col- 
lins wife  re- 
ferd  to  Court 
Assist"  for 
triaU. 


desii-e  more  of  Dedham  land,  they  may  stirr  vp  and  moove  their  seuerall 
tounes  to  further  that  worke  by  yeilding  some  land  in  each  of  their  tonnes 
adjacent,  to  recompence  Dedham  for  what  land  they  shalj  part  with,  ouer  and 
above  the  two  thousand  acres  abovesajd. 

Whereas  Joseph  Jewett  hath  certifjed,  vnder  his  hand,  that  himselfe  and 
Willjam  Wild,  accordmg  to  an  order  of  the  last  Gennerall  Courte,  hath  lajd 
out  Haverill  bounds  according  to  the  Courts  graunt,  this  Coiut  approoves 
of  his  retourne,  and  confirmes  the  sajd  bounds  to  the  sajd  toune  of  Haverill 
accordingly. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Tliomas  Dudley,  Es^,  for  avojding  of  future 
difference,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  fiveteene  hundred  acres  of  land  formerly 
graunted  to  the  sajd  Thomas  Dudley,  Es^,  about  fower  miles  from  Concord, 
which  is  bounded  by  the  river  on  the  one  side,  and  land  graunted  to  John 
Winthrop,  Es^,  deceased,  on  an  other  side,  shall  be  lajd  out  two  miles  and  a 
halfe  along  by  the  riuers  side,  and  so  to  make  vp  the  fiveteene  hundred  acres 
from  the  rivers  side  to  the  landward. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  wife  of  Xtopher  Collins,  now  in  prison  for  suspi- 
tion  of  witchcraft,  on  good  securitje  to  the  valew  of  one  hundred  pounds,  so 
judged  by  any  one  magistrate,  may  be  bayled  till  the  Court  of  Asistants,  in 
March  next,  when  shee  is  to  appeare  to  answer  the  accusatjons  layd  in  against 
hir  for  witchcraft ;  provided,  any  one  magistrate  may,  if  he  see  cawse,  coiSitt 
hir  to  prison  agajne.     The  Court  is  dissolved. 


1652.     *Att  a   Gennerall   Courte  of  Elecdjons,  held  at  Boston,  26  May, 

1652. 


— — Y— — 

26  May. 

[*75.] 


JN°  ENDECOT,  Es^,  was    chosen  Gofln',  and  tooke  his   oath  accord- 
ingly. 
Tho  Dudley,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep*  GoQn',  and  tooke  his  oath. 
Rich  Belhngham,  Es^, " 
M"'  Increase  Nowell, 
M'  Sjmon  Broadstreete, 
M"^  W"  Hibbins, 
M'^  Sam  Sjmons, 
Capt  Robt  Bridges, 
Cap?  Tho  Wiggin, 
M^  Tho  Flint, 
M''  John  Glouer, 
Cap?  Daii  Gookin, 


>  were  chosen  Asistants,  &  tooke  their  oathes. 


26  May. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  77 

M^  Simon  Bradstreete,"!  _.    .  .  .  165  2. 

^     _  ,^,    ^_       ,  }  were  chosen  Comissioners  for  the  Vnited  Collonies. 

Cap!  W™  Hawthorne,  J  •' 

Jn"  Endecot,  Es^,  GoQuo'','! 

Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,        J 

Majo''  Robert  Sedjiike  was  chosen  jNIajo"^  Gennerall,  &  tooke  his  oath. 

M'  Edward  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretaiy. 

M''  Richard  Russell  was  chosen  Treasurer. 

The  names  of  the  Deputjes  retourned  from  the  seuerall  tounes  to  serve 
at  this  Gennerall  Court  were,  — 

Salem  :   Capt  W""  Hauthorne,  M'^  Hen :  Bartholmew. 

Charles  Toune  :  M''  Rich  Russell,  Tres"',  Capt  Lef  Fraunc :  Norton. 

Dorchester :  Lef^  Roger  Clapp,  Ens :  Hopestill  Foster. 

Boston :  Cap?  Jn°  Leuerett,  Lef*  Tho  Clarke. 

Roxbuiy :  M'  John  Johnson,  M''  Edw:  Dennlson. 

Water  Toune  :  M'  Rich  Broune,  M"^  Ephrajm  Childe. 

Cambridge  :  M''  Edw:  Jackson. 

Lynne  :  M''  Thomas  Laughton. 

Ipswich:  Majo'  Dan:  Dennison,  M'  Jn"  Whiple. 

Newbery  :  Capt  W™  Gerish. 

Weimouth :  ^  Kingman. 

Hingham :  Capt  Bozoon  Allen,  M'  Jerf  Houchin. 

Concord :  Capt  Simon  Willard. 

Dedham  :   Capt  Eleazer  Lusher. 

SaHsbury  :  M'  Tho  Bradbury. 

Hampton  :  M''  Roger  Shawe. 

Rowley:  M''  Joseph  Juett,  M"^  Maximill:  Juett. 

Sudbuiy  :  M"^  Edmond  Rice. 

Doner  :  M'  Vat  Hill. 

Braintree :  Steephen  Kingsly. 

Glocester :     ^ 

Woobourne :  Cap?  Edw:  Johnson. 

Wenham :  W""  Fiske. 

Hauerill :  M""  Robt  Cleoments. 

Redding :     ^ 

Springfeild  :  M'  "W"'  Davies. 

Maiden :  M'  Joseph  Hills. 

Meadfeild:     ^ 

Majo""  Dan  Denison,  Speaker  y®  session. 


78  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

165  2.  *The  Holy  Scriptures  of  the  Old  and  New  Testament  being  written  by  the 

'""    '^       '  jDljhetts,  apostles,  and  holy  men  of  God,  inspired  by  the  Holy  Ghost,  conteyn- 

'"'  ing  in  them  the  infallible  and  whole  Avill  of  God,  which  he  purposed  to  make 

„      ,     „  knoune  to  mankiudc,  both  for  his  oune  worshipp  and  service,  and  also  for  the 

Poenalty  for  i  jr  » 

denying  the       instruction,  obedjence,  faith,  and  salvation  of  man,  which  yet  by  hferetickes  in 

Holy  Scrip-  piiiii* 

tures  to  be  the  former  ages,  and  now  of  late  by  others,  have  bmn  oppugned  and  denyed  so  to 
word  of  God.  -^^^  which  if  connived  at,  would  mannifestly  tend  to  the  ouerthrow  of  all  true 
fligion  and  salvation,  —  for  the  prevention  of  so  hajnous  a  crjme  itt  is  therefore 
heereby  ordered  and  enacted,  that  what  pson  or  persons  soeuer,  professing  the 
Christian  religion,  above  the  age  of  sixteene  yeeres,  that  shall,  within  this 
jurisdiccon,  wittingly  and  willingly,  at  any  time  after  the  publication  of  this 
order,  deny,  either  by  word  or  writing,  any  of  the  bookes  of  the  Old  Testa- 
ment, as  Gennesis,  Exodus,  Levitticiis,  Noumbers,  Deutronomje,  Joshua, 
Judges,  Ruth,  Samuell,  Samuell,  Kings,  Kings,  Chronickles,  Chronickles, 
Ezra,  Nehemjah,  Esther,  Job,  Psalmes,  Proverbes,  Eclesiastes,  Cantickles, 
Isayah,  Jerremiah,  Lamentacons,  Ezekiell,  Danjell,  Hosea,  Joell,  Amos, 
Obadjah,  Jonah,  !Mica,  Nahum,  Habacuck,  Zef)haniah,  Haggay,  Zeckariah, 
Jlalachj  ;  or  New,  as  INIathew,  Marke,  Luke,  John,  Acts,  Romanes,  Corin- 
thians, Coriuthjans,  Galatians,  Ephesians,  Phillippians,  Colossians,  Thessalo- 
nians,  Thessalonians,  Timothje,  Timothje,  Titus,  Philemon,  Hebrewes,  James, 
Peeter,  Peeter,  John,  John,  John,  Jude,  &  Revelation,  to  be  the  written  and 
infallible  word  of  God,  or  if  any  pson,  as  aforesajd,  belonging  to  tliis  jurisdic- 
con, shall  coiiiitt  the  sajd  crjme  vppon  the  sea,  not  being  or  belonging  to  the 
jurisdiccon  of  any  other  coinonwealth,  ^  shall  be  forthwith  apprehended  by  the 
next  officer  or  officers,  whether  marshall,  or  counstable,  or  their  deiiu'%  who 
shall  have  power  so  to  doe  by  warrant  from  any  one  of  the  magistrates,  and 
shall  be  coiTiitted  to  the  prison  at  Boston,  without  bajle  or  majncprize,  there 
to  be  safely  kept  till  the  next  County  Courte,  where,  vppon  sufficjcnt  teste- 
mony  brought  against  the  sajd  delinquent,  he  shall  be  adjudged  for  his  offence, 
after  legall  convictjon,  to  pay  such  a  fine  as  the  Court  which  shall  have  the 
cognizance  of  the  crjme  shall  judge  meete,  not  exceeding  the  soiiie  of  fifty 
pounds,  or  shall  be  openly  and  seuerely  whijjt  by  the  executioner,  whether 
counstable  or  any  other  appointed,  not  exceeding  forty  stroakes,  vnlesse  he 
shall  pvblicly  recant  before  his  sentance,  (w'=''  if  he  doe,)  he  shall  not  pay 
above  the  fine  of  tenn  pounds  to  the  Treasurer,  for  the  vse  of  the  coiiion- 
wealth,  or  be  whipt  in  case  he  jjay  not  the  fine  ;  and  itt  is  further  ordered 
&  enacted,  that  if  the  sajd  ofl'endor,  after  his  recantation,  sentence,  or  execu- 
tion, shall  the  second  time  publish,  and  obstinately  and  pertinaciously  majn- 
tajne  the  sajd  wicked  opinion,  he  shall  be  banished  or  put  to  death,  as  the 
Court  shall  judge. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  79 

Whereas  itt  appeares  to  this  Court  that  there  is  much  dcceipt  vsed  by      1  G  5  2. 
some   bakers  and  others,  who,  when   the   clarkes  of  the  niarketts  comes  to    "       *        ' 
weiprh  their  bread,  pretend  they  have  none  but  for  their  ounc  vse,  and  vet  ,„  "^', 

°  i  .■  '  •'        To  prevent  de- 

afterwards  put  their  bread  to  sale,  w*  vppon  trjall  hath  liinn  found  to  light,  ceipt  in  bakers. 

—  for  prevention  of  such  abuses  for  tjme  to  come,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte 

and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  all  persons  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon  who  shall 

vsually  sell  bread,  within  doores  or  without,  shall  at  all  tjmes  heereafter  have 

all  their  bread  that  they  either  putt  to  sale  or  spend  in  their  liimilyes  made  of 

assizes,  markt,  &  yeelded  to  trjall  of  the  aforesajd  clai-kes,  as  is  directed  for 

breade  by  order  of  Court,  page  3,  title  Bakers,  and  vnder  the  pocnaltje  therein 

exprest. 

*Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  if  any  per-        [*T7.] 
son  or  persons,  repayring  to  any  public  officer  of  this  jurisdiccon  to  vjew  any 
record  or  writing  coiuitted  to  his  charge,  shall  wittingly  &  willingly  deface  or 
rend  any   such  record  or  writing,  vj^pon  coniplainte   of  such  officer   to   any 
magistrate,  and  proofs  by  oath  of  the  sajd  officer,  euery  person  so  offending 
shall  forfeite  to  the  party  concerned   therein  treble  the  daiiiage  that  might 
have  ensued  or  accrewed  to  him  or  them  thereby,  and  shall  also  be  fined  as 
much  to  the  countrje,  or  suffer  two  months  imprisonment,  without  bajle  or 
majne  prize,  or  stand  in  the  pillory  two  bowers  in  Boston  markett  place,  with  Poenalty  for 
a  paper  ouer  his  heade,  in  capitall  letters,  A  Defacer  of  Eecords,  the  sjieciall  or  ^^^^^^  "^ '^"^ 
pticular  punnishment  to  be  determined  by  the  next  County  Courte  where  the 
offence  was  coiuitted,  and  shall  also  stand  bound  to  the  good  beha\iour  during 
the  pleasure  of  the  Courte. 

Forasmuch  as  diuerse  inhabitants  within  this  jiuisdiccon,  who  have  long  ProTicon  for 
contjnewed  amongst  vs,  receiving  pteccon  from  this   gouernment,  have,  as  fidem4'^to  • 
•wee  are  informed,  vttered  ofFencive  speeches,  whereby  their  fidellitje  to  this  government. 
government  may  justly  be  suspected,  and  also,  that  diuerse  straungers  of  for- 
raigne  parts,  of  whose  fidellitje  wee  have  not  that  assurance  which  is  commonly 
required  by  all  gouernments,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the 
authoritje   thereof,   that   the   County  Courts,   or  any  one   magistrate   out  of 
Courte,  shall  have  power,  and  is  heereby  authorized,  to  rcquicr  the  oath  of 
fidellitje  of  all  setled  inhabitants  amongst  vs  who  hath  not  already  taken  the 
same,  as  also  to  require  this  oath  vnderwritten  of  all  straungers  who,  after 
two  months,  have  their  abode  heere ;  and  if  any  person  shall  refuse  to  take  the 
resijective  oath,  he  or  they  shallbe  bound  ouer  to  the  next  County  Courte,  or 
Court  of  Asistants,  where,  if  he  shall  refuse,  he  shall  forfeite  five  pounds  a 
weeke  for  euery  weeke  he  shall  so  continew  in  this  jurisdiccon  after  his  sajd 
refusall,  vnlesse   he  cann  give  sufficjent  securitje  to  the  satisffaction  of  the 


80  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1652.      Court  or  magistrate  for  his  ficlellitje  during  his  or  their  residence  amongst  vs ; 
^~    ''        '    the  oath  to  be  as  foUoweth  :  — 

26  May. 

Yo",  A  B,  doe  acknowledge  yourself  subject  to  the  lawes  of  this  jui-isdic- 
con  during  your  residence  vnder  this  gouernment,  and  doe  heere  sweare  by 
the  great  name  of  the  euer  living  God,  and  engage  yoxu'self  to  be  true  and 
faithfull  to  the  same,  and  not  to  plott,  contrive,  or  conceale  any  thing  that  is 
to  the  detrjment  or  hurte  thereof. 

Troopers  liber-  Itt  is  Ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  for  the  encour- 

agement of  those  who  have  or  shall  hereafter  list  themselves  for  troopers  in 
any  county  of  this  jurisdiccon,  that  they  shall  have  all  priviledges  formerly 
graunted  still  continewed,  and  that  such  souldjers  listed,  amounting  to  the  nom- 
ber  of  thirty,  shallbe  accompted  a  troope,  and  have  libertje  of  chojce  and 
nomination  of  capt,  left,  and  cornet,  and  quaitermaster,  who,  being  allowed 
by  the  authoritje  of  the  Courte,  shall  stand  by  coiiiission,  and  all  other  inferior 
officers  to  be  chosen  by  the  company,  and  established  by  the  cheife  coiiiander 
of  the  troope,  and  that  all  such  troojjers  shall  keepe  a  good  horse,  and  well 
fitted  with  sadle,  bridle,  holsters,  and  pistolls,  or  a  carbjne  and  sword,  and 
having  listed  his  horse,  shall  not  alter  nor  put  him  of  without  licence  from 
the  coriander  in  cheife,  and  the  sajd  troope  shallbe  excercised  according  to 
lawe. 
[*78.]  *'VVhereas  it  hath  binn  evidenced  vnto  this  Courte,  that  much  daiiiage  hath 

To  prevent  the  formerly  arisen  to  merchants  tradius:  hence  by  bade  making  of  fish,  and  the 

abuse  in  bad  •'  o  J  o  ' 

making  of  fish,  creddit  of  our  trade  therein  hath  much  suflfered,  tending  to  the  prejudice  of 

our  commerce  with  other  nations,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  and  enacted  by  this 
Gennerall  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  at  euery  ffishing  place  within 
this  jurisdiccon,  some  discreete  and  honest  pson  be  appointed  by  the  County 
Courte  vnto  which  such  fishing  place  doth  belong,  and  those  psons  so  nomi- 
nated and  appointed  are  by  this  Courte  impowred  to  give  the  oath  heereafter 
expressed  vnto  such  persons  as  shall  be  chosen  by  the  deliuerers  and  receiv- 
ers of  any  fish,  who  have  libertje  hecreby,  either  of  them,  to  choose  one  or 
more  sufficyent  and  knowing  men  in  such  cases  to  vejw  what  fish  is  deliuered 
and  recejved,  which  vejwers  shall  be  sworne  as  aforesajd,  and  w'hat  they  ap- 
proove  of  as  marchantable  the  receiver  shall  accept,  and  what  is  refuse  fish 
shall  be  cast  by  ;  and  the  sajd  vejwers,  for  their  labor  and  pajnes  aforesajd, 
shallbe  allowed  one  penny  p  quintall  for  so  much  marchantable  fish  as  he  or 
they  shall  vejw,  to  be  pajd,  one  halfe  by  the  deliuerer,  the  other  halfe  by  the 
receiver  ;  and  for  further  dii-ection  to  the  vejwers  in  trjall  of  fish,  itt  is  heereby 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  81 

ordered,  that  all  sonne  biuuit  and  di-y  fish  that  hath  biiiii  fii-st  pickled  shall      16  52. 
be  judged  marchantable.  ^'     "^ 

26  May. 

The  vejwers  oath. 

Yow  doe  swearc,  &(5,  that  yow  shall  jmpartially  vcjw  such  fish  as  is  pre-  Tlievcjwere 
seiited  before  yow,  and  determine  what  parte  thereof  is  marchantable,  and 
what  parte  is  refuse  fish  and  vnmarchantable,  according  to  yoiu'  best  skill, 
knowledge,  and  judgment.     So  help  you  God,  &d. 

Itt  is  ordered  &  enacted  by  this  Courtc  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  All  civiU  ac- 

.      ,  .  '11  r  *    •!!  1-    n    1,      cons  to  be  trjed 

after  the  eud  of  this  ^sent  session,  all  accons  oi  a  civill  nature  shall  be  wthoutjurjes, 
trjed  in  all  Courts  within  this  jurisdiccon  by  the  judges  of  the  sajd  Courte  ""'^«^«>  *"• 
without  a  jury,  except  it  be  desired  by  plaintiff  or  defendant,  in  which  case  it 
shall  be  graunted ;  provided,  that  the  partje  that  shall  desier  a  jury  shall  pay 
the  charges  of  the  jury,  viz.,  twenty  shillings  for  euery  accbn,  to  the  clarke  of 
the  Courte,  at  the  tjmewhen  he  makes  knowne  his  request;  and  itt  is  ordered, 
that  jurors  for  the  trjall  of  such  cases  as  aforesajd  may  be  taken  out  of  the 
three  or  fower  next  towiies  onely,  notwithstanding  any  former  lawc  or  order 
to  the  contrary,  which  sajd  twenty  shillings  shall  be  assessed  in  costs  vppon 
the  party  against  whom  judgement  shall  be  awarded  in  all  County  Courts,  or 
Courts  of  Assistants  ;  and  if  any  person  desier  to  have  a  jury  in  speciall  Courts, 
he  shall  pay  the  jurors  fower  shillings  a  day,  as  in  that  lawe  is  pvlded  ;  and  for 
the  more  orderly  proceeding  with  and  without  jurjes  in  one  and  the  same 
Courte,  itt  is  ordered,  that  such  as  desier  to  have  their  cases  trjed  by  jurjes 
shall  give  notice  thereof  to  the  secretary  or  clarke  of  that  Courte  where  the 
accon  is  to  be  trjed  fower  dajes  inclusively  before  the  Court,  to  the  end  that 
a  jury  n»y  be  provided ;  and  the  sajd  secretary  or  clarke  shall  enter  such  accons 
the  day  before  the  Courte,  or  on  the  first  day  of  the  Courte,  before  the  set- 
ting thereof,  that  so  they  may  be  first  trjed,  and  the  jury  discharged;  and  the 
partjes  whom  it  may  concerne  shall  take  care  for  the  timely  paying  of  the  en- 
try of  the  accbn  and  chardges  of  the  jury,  at  their  perrill. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  and  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Courte  enacted,  that  no  person       [*79.] 
shallbe  indited,  presented,  informed  against,  or  complajned  of,  to  any  Coiute  An  act  for  lim- 

itaconof  indit., 

or  magistrate  within  this  jurisdiccon,  for  the  breach  of  any  poenal  lawe,  or  any  compi-"",  &c. 
other  misdemeanor,  the  forfeiture  whereof  belongs  to  the  countrje,  vnlesse  the 
sajd  indictment,  presentment,  information,  or  complajnt  be  made  and  exhibitted 
within  one  yeere  after  the  offence  be  coiuitted  ;  and  if  any  such  presentment, 
indictment,  information,  or  complaint  be  not  made  within  the  tjme  limited, 
then  the  same  shall  be  vojde  and  of  none  effect ;  provided  alwajes,  that  this  lawe 

VOL.    IV. P.VKX    1.  11 


82  THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

shall  not  extend  to  any  capitall  offences,  nor  any  crjmes  that  may  concerne 
losse  of  member  or  banishment,  or  to  any  treasonable  plotts  or  conspiracjes 
against  the  coiuonwealth,  nor  to  any  felloujes  above  tenn  shillings  ;  nor  shall  it 
hinder  any  pson  greived  for  any  wrong  donne  to  him  or  his  wife,  children,  or 
servants,  or  estate,  reall  or  personall,  but  that  eucry  such  person  shall  have 
such  remedjes  as  formerly  he  might  and  ought  to  have.  Further,  it  is  ordered, 
that  this  lawe  shall  not  take  effect  till  after  the  first  of  September  next. 

For  p'ventiou  For  the  better  pvention  of  theft,  a  sinne  of  late  much  growing  vppon 

vs,  and  whereas  the  former  lawes  against  theft  hath  only  provided  for  the 
dainage  of  the  wronged  partje,  itt  is  therefore  further  ordered  by  this  Courte 
and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  what  person  soeuer  shall  steale  fi'om  any  person 
any  cojne,  goods,  or  chattels,  to  the  value  of  tenn  shillings  or  vpwards,  shallbe 
whipt,  or  pay  such  a  soihe  or  soiiies  of  money  as  the  Courte  or  magistrate  that 
hath  propper  cognizance  thereof  shall  adjudge  to  be  sufficjent  to  sattisfy  all  costs 
and  charges  of  the  Court  and  coimtrje  in  prosecuting  and  trying  the  sajd  of- 
fender, to  the  vse  of  the  coiiion  treasury  ;  and  for  smaller  thefts,  it  is  left  to 
the  discretion  of  the  judge  or  judges,  that  shall  have  cognizance  of  the  crjme, 
to  appoint  smaller  mulcts  or  punnishments,  or  only  legall  admonition,  as  they 
shall  finde  cawse ;  and  further,  itt  is  declared  and  ordered,  that  when  any  goods 
are  stoUen  fi'om  any  person,  the  counstable  of  the  toune,  by  warrant  from  au- 
thoritje, shall  search  for  the  same  in  any  suspected  places  or  howses,  and  vppon 
search  or  otherwise,  if  he  shall  finde  the  same  or  any  parte  thereof,  or  any 
ground  of  suspition  appearing  to  the  officer,  he  shall  bring  the  delinquent  or 
suspected  party  to  a  magistrate,  to  be  proceeded  with  according  to  the  lawe  ; 
and  if  any  person  having  goods  stollen  from  him  shall  privately  receive  his 
sajd  stollen  goods,  (except  the  fact  be  private,  or  coiiiltted  by  some  member 
of  his  oune  family,)  and  so  smother  the  theft,  and  shall  not  legally  prosecute 
the  offender,  he  shall  forfeite  to  the  coiuon  treasury  the  goodes  or  chattells  so 
received,  or  the  true  value  thereof. 

Negative  vote  Whereas  there  is  a  manifest  &  inconvenient  mistake  in  the  penning  of 

the  order,  title  Gennerall  Court,  page  the  8'*  of  the  last  printed  booke,  that 
leaves  all  or  most  of  the  cases  formerly  issued  in  the  Gennerall  Court  doubt- 
full  &  vncertajne,  and  takes  away  the  negative  vote,  both  of  Magis'**  and 
Deputjes,  in  making  lawes,  as  well  as  in  cases  of  judicature,  which  was  not 
intended,  much  lesse  consented  to,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that  for  tjme  to 
come,  if  there  fall  out  any  difference  betwixt  y""  Magistrates  and  the  Deputjes, 
in  any  case  of  judicature,  either  civill  or  criminall,  it  shall  be  determined 
by  y"  major  pt  of  the  whole  Court,  and  the  forenientioned  lawe  is  hereby 
repealed. 


in  vse  agaiDe. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  83 

*Whereas   some  chvelling   liowses  and   other  howscs  within  this  juris-      16  5  2. 
diccbn    have    been   sett   on   fire,   and    tlie    meanes    or    occasion    thereof   not    ^       '^       ' 
discouered,  thougli  some  persons  have  binn  vehemently  suspected  to  have  binn 
instrumental!  therein,  the  Court,  taking  into  consideration  the  dain^cer  of  such  „ 

°  °  Burning  of 

a  wicked  enterprise,  especially  in  tonnes  where  the  howses  are  nccre  adjoyn-  bowses  mado 
ing,  and  there  being  no  lawe  yett  provided  for  the  punuishment  of  so  hejnous 
a  crjme,  doth  therefore  heereby  order,  and  bee  it  enacted  by  the  authoritje  of 
this  Courte,  that  any  person  or  persons  wliatsocucr,  of  the  age  of  sixteene 
yeeres  and  vpwards,  that  shall,  after  the  publicatjon  heereof,  wittingly  and  will- 
ingly set  on  fire  any  barne,  stable,  mill,  oiithowses,  stacks  of  wood,  corne,  or  hay, 
or  any  other  thing  of  like  nature,  shall,  vppon  due  conviction,  by  testemony  or 
confession,  pay  double  daiiiages  to  the  party  damnified,  and  be  severely  whipt. 
And  if  any  person,  of  the  age  aforesajd,  shall,  after  the  pul)lication  heereof, 
wittingly,  willingly,  and  ffelloniously  sett  on  fire  anj'  dwelling  bowse,  meeting 
house,  storehouse,  or  shall,  in  like  manner,  set  on  fire  any  outhowse,  barne, 
stable,  leantoo,  stacks  of  hay,  corne,  or  wood,  or  any  thing  of  like  nature, 
whereby  any  dwelling  house,  meeting  howse,  or  store  liowsc  comes  to  be 
burnt,  the  partje  or  partjes  vehemently  suspected  thereof  shallbe  aphended 
by  warrant  from  one  or  more  of  the  magistrates,  and  coiliittcd  to  prison,  there 
to  remajne,  without  bajle,  till  tlie  next  Court  of  Asistants,  who,  vppon  legall 
conviction  by  due  proofe  or  confession  of  the  crjme,  shall  adjudge  such  a 
person  or  persons  to  be  put  to  death,  and  to  forfeite  so  much  of  his  lands, 
goods,  or  chattels  as  shall  make  full  sattisfaccon  to  the  party  or  partjes 
damifjed. 

Whereas  there  is  no  tjme  exprest  by  lawe  when  the  counstables  watch  Addition  of 
shall  beginne  and  end,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  and  enacted  by  the  authoritje  counJtable  to 
of  this  Courte,  that  henceforth  all  coimstables  watches  in  euery  tonne  within  ^''"  5'  ™='*ch, 
this  jurisdicction  shall  beginne  the  first  of  May,  and  shall  not  end  till  the  last 
of  September,  vppon  the  pajne  or  poenaltje  of  five  pounds,  to  be  levjed  vppon 
euery  counstable  neglecting  the  same.     And  it  shallbe  the  speciall  care  of 
euery  counstable  to  see  that  the  M'atch  be  so  warned  that  it  may  not  consist  of 
all  or  the  greater  parte  of  youths,  but  that  able  men  be  joyned  with  them, 
that  the  watch  be  a  sufficijent  watch ;  and  the  selectmen  of  Boston,  Charles 
Toune,    and    Salem    shall    have    power  to   give    order  to    the  counstable  to 
beginn  iiis  watch  sooner,  and  to  contjnew  them  for  longer  tjme,  as  they  see 
occasion. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  noe  maltster  or  maker  of  malte,  after  publication  heereof.  For  cleansing 
shall  deliuer  or  passe  away  any  malte,  by  him  or  his  procurement  made,  be- 
fore it  be  cleansed  from  the  dust  and  taile  which  arises  in  the  malting,  drying. 


84  ,    THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1652.      find   ordering  of   it  in  his  hands,  on  poenaltje  of   twelve  pence   p  bushell, 
ppon  legall  conviction  before  any  magistrate  or  Courte,  one  lialfe  to  the  in- 
former, the  other  halfe  to  the  countrje. 
Resolution  of  a  Itt  being  put  to  the  qusestion,  whether  a  psou  convicted  of  tln-ee  seucral] 

coiivicc^of' '*     offences  of  drxnickeness,  and  neuer  convicted  before  authoritje  before  the  last 
drunckenes,      time,  shall  be   fined  above   thirty  shillings,  the  Conrte   resolved   it   on   the 
negative. 
[*81.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  and  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Courte   enacted,  that  the 

To  prevent  de-  printed  order  about  mony  shall  be  in  force  vntill  the  first  of  September  next, 

ceipt  &  abuse  c  i       p  •  o 

in  mony.  and  no  longer,  and  that  from  and  after  the  first  of  September  next  the  mony 

heereafter  appointed  and  expressed  shallbe  the  current  mony  of  this  coinon- 
wealth,  and  no  other,  vnlesse  English,  (except  the  receivers  consent  therc- 
vnto.)  In  pursuance  of  the  intent  of  this  Courte  heerein,  bee  it  farther 
ordered  and  enacted  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Courte,  that  all  persons  what- 
soeuer  have  libertje  to  bring  in  vnto  the  mint  howse  at  Boston  all  bulljon, 
plate,  or  Spannish  cojne,  there  to  be  melted  and  brought  to  the  allay  of  star- 
ling silver  by  John  Hull,  master  of  the  sajd  mint,  and  his  swornc  officers,  and 
by  him  to  be  cojncd  into  twelve  penny,  sixpenny,  and  three  penny  peeces, 
•which  shallbe  for  forme  flatt  and  square  on  the  sides,  and  stamped  on  the  one 
side  with  NE,  and  on  the  other  side  with  the  figure  xii*,  vi*,  &  iii,  according 
to  the  valew  of  each  peece,  together  with  a  privy  marke,  which  shall  be  ap- 
pointed euery  thi-ee  mouths  by  the  GoQno'",  and  knowne  only  to  him  and 
the  sworne  officers  of  the  mint ;  and  further,  the  sajd  master  of  the  mint 
aforesajd  is  heereby  required  to  cojne  all  the  sajd  mony  of  good  silver,  of  the 
just  allay  of  new  starling  English  mony,  and  for  valew  to  stampe  twopence 
in  a  shilling  of  lesser  value  then  the  present  English  cojne,  and  the  lesser 
peeces  proportionably.  And  all  such  cojne  as  aforesajd  shallbe  acknowledged 
to  be  the  currant  cojne  of  this  coinonwealth,  and  passe  from  man  to  man  in 
all  pajmcnts  accordingly,  within  this  jurisdiccbn  only.  And  the  mint  master, 
for  himselfe  and  officers,  for  their  pajnes  and  laboiu-  in  melting,  refyning,  and 
coynning,  is  allowed  by  this  Courte  to  take  one  shilling  out  of  euery  twenty 
shillings  which  he  shall  stampe  as  aforesajd  ;  and  it  shall  be  iu  the  liberty  of 
any  person  who  brings  into  the  minthousc  any  bulljon,  plate,  or  Spannish 
cojne,  as  aforesajd,  to  be  present  and  see  the  same  melted,  refined,  and  allajed, 
and  then  to  take  a  receipt  of  the  master  of  the  mint  for  the  weight  of  that 
which  is  good  silver,  allajed  as  aforesajd,  for  which  the  mint  master  shall  de- 
liuer  him  the  like  weight  in  currant  money,  viz.,  euery  shilling  to  weigh 
threepenny  trojweight,  and  lesser  peeces  proportionably,  deducting  allowance 
for  cojnage,  as   before    expressed.      And  that  this  order,  being  of  so  great 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  85 

concernment,  may  not  in  any  pticular  thereof  fall  to  the  ground,  itt  is  further      1  G  5  2. 
ordered,  that  jNI"'  Eichard  Bolliugham,  M'  Williajn  Ilibbens,  M"'  Edward  Raw-    ""■     >        ' 

.  26M;iv. 

son,  Capt  Jn"  Lcueret,  and  M'  Thomas  Clarke  be  a  comittee  appointed  by  this 
Court  to  appoint  the  mint  howse  in  some  convenjcnt  jjlace  in  Boston,  to  give 
John  Hull,  master  of  the  mint,  the  oath  sviiteable  to  his  place,  and  to  ap- 
proove  of  all  other  officers,  and  determine  what  else  shall  appcare  to  them  as 
necessarily  to  be  donne  for  the  carrying  an  end  of  the  whole  order. 

Whereas   captajnes,  lejvetennants,  and  ensignes   have  binn  hitherto   ex-  Sarg"  excmp- 
empted  by  lawe  from  counstables  watches,  itt  is   ordered  by  this  Court,  that  gt^^^les  watch- 
lienceforth  the  sargeants  of  the  seuerall  companjes  shall  have  the  like  libertje  '^'• 
to  be  freed  from  counstables  watches. 

*Forasmuch  as  many  testimonies  and  evidences  brought  into  the  seuerall       [*82.] 
Courts  of  this  jurisdiccon  are  not  only  badly  written  and  false  English,  so  that  Evidences  to  be 

f:iirely  written. 

no  man  cann  scarcely  reade  or  make  sense  of  them,  but  are  presented  to  the 
Courte  in  such-  smale  scripts  and  slurred  paper,  and  so  sojled,  that  is  most 
vnseemely  for  any  person  to  Jpsent,  or  for  a  Court  to  receave,  to  file  them  vp 
for  evidences,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof, 
that  euery  Court,  magistrate,  and  coiHissioncr  shall  and  is  heereby  impowred 
to  order  and  regulate  the  same. 

The  Courte  being  informed  that  seuerall  persons  gave  in  their  votes  for  Chojce  of  offi- 
the  chcjce  of  capt,  left,  cornet,  and  other  officers  for  the  troope  of  horse  in  the  troope  of  horse 
county  of  SufFolke,  who  were  not  freemen,  nor  had  tooke  the  oath  of  fidellitie,  '""^  county  of 

■'  Suttblke. 

they  cannot  approove  of  such,  their  chojce  being  contrary  to  lawe.  Itt  is  there- 
fore ordered,  that  the  seuerall  troopers  shall  proceede  to  a  new  election  of  capt, 
left,  cornet,  quarter  master,  &d,  and  present  such  persons  that  shall  be  legally 
chosen  to  the  next  County  Court  to  be  confirmed  and  approoved  of 

"Whereas  there  is  but  one  prison  in  all  this  jurisdiccon,  and  very  incoli-  A  new  prison 

.  .         to  be  built  at 

vcnjent  to  send  persons  from  all  partes  of  the  countrye  when  there  is  occasion  ipswich. 
to  the  same,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that  there  shall  be  another  prison  erected 
and  built  at  Ipswich,  and  that  there  shall  be  allowed  by  the  countrye  forty 
pounds  for  the  effecting  thereof,  and  the  worke  to  be  carrjed  on  and  mannaged 
by  the  select  men  of  the  sajd  toune  of  Ipswich. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  the  chojce  of  a  sargeant  majo""  for  the  Chojeeofs'g' 

.         niaj'  of  Suf- 

regiment  of  the  county  of  Suffolkc  be  suspended  vntiU  after  the  next  session  fpu^g  suspend- 
of  this  Court. 

In  pursuance  of  the  late  imitable  pra^sident  of  the  Parljament  of  Eng-  Coinittee  to 
land   now  being   for  the   setling   of  a   counsell   of  trade  in  this  jurisdiccon,  ^^^^        ^f 
hoping  that,  through  Gods  blessing,  wee   also  may  reape  the  like  bennefitt  "''"^"'■ 
thereby  that  they  by  very  great  experjence  have  found,  that  that  right  which 


86  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  52.      is  now  im prisoned  iu  private  breasts  niiglit  be  drawn  forth  for  publicke  vse 

"       ^       ^    when  by  such  good  meanes  the  way  is  methodized  tliat  euery  man  may  knowe 

26  Mav.  ,      ,  ,  ,  T  1         •  T    "  1     • 

whether,  anil  to  wnome,  and  at  what  tjmes  to  come  to  discouer  thejre  grciv- 

ances,  and  to  advise  of  meanes  for  remedje,  as  also  to  propose  Ifteir  seuerall 

ingenuous  wajes  for  the  promoting  of  trade,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that  M'' 

Eichai-d  Russell,  M''  Nathaniell  Duncan,  IP  Thomas  Broughton,  M"^  Niccolas 

Davison,  M''  Thomas  Clarke,  and  Capt  Thomas  Savage  shallbe  the  counsel  1  to 

consider  of  all  sorts  of  tradeing,  and  to  consult  about  the  hest  wajes  of  im- 

l)rooving  the  same,  and  to  mecte  together  in  some  place  in  Boston  or  C'harles 

Toune,  where  themselves  shall  apj)ointe,  and  having  agreed  of  such  things  as 

they  conccave  to  be  good  and  proffittable  for  the  advance  of  tradeing,  to  jji^cscnt 

the  same  to  the  next  session  of  this  Courte  to  be  approovcd  of,  if  they  see  it  good. 

[*83.]  *Whcreas  the  right  ordering  and   setllng  of  the  militja  of  this  coiiion- 

Militia  regul.i-   -wcijtli  'm  of  great  concernment  vnto  the  wcllbeing  thereof,  and  that  a  time  of 

tions. 

peace,  through  the  good  hand  of  God,  gives  liberty  therevnto,  itt  is  therefore 
ordered  by  this  Courte,  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  no  company  of  soul- 
djers  in  any  tounc  within  this  jurisdiccbn,  except  those  already  allowed  of, 
shall  be  accompted  a  foote  company,  to  enjoy  the  privilydge  of  election  and 
nomination  of  capt,  left,  and  ensigne,  or  any  of  them,  vnlesse  they  be  com- 
pleately  full,  to  the  noumber  of  sixty  fowcr  persons,  besides  such  officers  to 
be  chosen ;  and  that  in  all  tonnes  and  places  where  there  is  to  that  noumber  of 
sixty  fower  psons  listed,  and  by  lawe  tjed  to  attend  all  ordinary  trajnnings, 
they  shall  be  accompted  a  foote  company,  and  enjoy  those  privilcdges ;  and 
where  there  is,  or  shallbe,  a  lesse  noumber  then  above  sj)ecificd,  they  shall 
have  libertje  to  choose  sargeants  and  other  inferior  officers,  which,  being  so 
chosen,  shall  instruct  those  souldjers,  and  trajne  them  in  the  vse  of  amies 
eight  dajes  in  the  yeare ;  and  the  major's  of  the  seuerall  regiments  shall  have 
power  to  order  and  regulate  the  smaller  tonnes,  and  to  joyne  them  into  one 
compleate  company,  which  shall  have  libertje  of  the  chojce  of  all  officers,  as 
aforesajd.  And  itt  is  further  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje 
thereof,  that  all  Scotchmen,  Negroes,  and  Indjans  inhabitting  with  or  servants 
to  the  English,  from  the  age  of  sixteene  to  sixty  yeares,  shallbe  listed,  and 
are  heereby  enjoyned  to  attend  traynings  as  well  as  the  English,  and  that 
euery  company  shall  have  two  druiiiers.  Itt  is  further  ordered  by  this  Courte 
and  the  authoritje  thereof,  and  be  it  heereby  enacted,  that  where,  in  any  tonne 
or  plantaoon  within  this  jurisdicction,  the  noumber  of  trayned  souldjers  listed, 
and  by  lawe  arc  liable  to  attend  constant  traynnings,  shall  arise  to  the  noum- 
ber of  two  hundred  men,  that  then  such  sou.ldjers  shallbe  divided  into  two 
companjes  ;  if  to  three  hundred,  then  to  divide  into  three  companjes  ;  and  so 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  87 

proportionably ;  and  that  the  seuerall  companjes  of  the  sajcl  toiinc  or  planta- 
tion shall  have  liberty  of  chojce  and  nomination  of  all  their  officers  in  their 
seuerall  companjes,  as  above  specified,  according  to  former  lawes  in  that  case 
provided ;  and  that  all  such  officers,  together  with  the  majo'"s,  nominated  and 
approoved  of  according  to  lawe,  shall  have  coiiiissions  from  the  Gcnnerall 
Courte  for  the  holding  their  places,  and  excercisiug  of  their  duty  in  their 
seuerall  charges.  And  whereas  diners  farmers  and  other  inhabitants  have 
their  dwellings  at  such  distance  as  that  they  cannot  attend  the  traynlng  with 
the  companjes  in  the  tounes  whereto  they  doe  belong,  the  cajjtajnes  vnder 
whose  coiiiand  they  be,  their  dwellings  being  three  miles  distant  fi'om  the 
meeting  howse  of  such  tounes,  may  appoint  that  such  souldjers,  if  tliCT'  be 
twelve  or  more  in  noumber,  be  trajned  six  dajes  in  the  yeare  by  some  officer 
of  the  company,  in  such  place  or  places  as  the  sajd  farmers  and  inhabitants 
may  meete  in;  and  that  the  sajd  farmers  and  inhabitants  shall  trajne  twice  in 
the  yeere  with  the  company  to  whom  they  doe  belong.  Itt  is  further  ordered  Farmers  3 
by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that  all  the  militia  of  Boston,  both  infantry  and  fjomtraine- 
ereat  artillirv,  till  the  Gennerall  Courte  or  counsell  of  the  countrve  cann  be  '"^''^  j>vided 

°  -  '  -for. 

assembled,  shallbe  ordered  by  a  coinittee  of  militia,  which  shall  consist  of  the 
magistrates  in  the  sajd  toune  and  the  three  cheife  millitary  officers  inhabitting 
in  the  sajd  toune,  whether  of  the  regement  or  companjes,  who  shall  have  a 
coiiiissiou  from  the  Gennerall  Courte  of  the  like  tennor  Major  Edward  Gibbons 
had  graunted  anno  1645.  And  itt  is  further  ordered,  that  the  sajd  coinittee 
of  militia  shall  have  power  to  appoint  a  millitary  watch,  *when  they  shall  see  [*84.] 
cawse,  for  the  safety  of  the  toune  and  countrje  ;  and  in  all  emergent  cases,  any 
three  of  them  may  acte  when,  due  meanes  being  vsed,  a  greate  noumber 
cannot  be  assembled.  Itt  is  further  ordered  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that 
Charles  Toune,  Salem,  and  Ipswich  shall  have  a  like  coinittee  of  militia,  who 
shall  have  like  powers  by  coiiiission.  And  for  all  other  tounes  within  this 
jurisdiccbn,  where  there  is  one  or  more  magistrates,  the  said  magistrate  or 
magistrates,  with  the  three  cheife  millitary  officers,  shall  have  the  power  of 
the  militia  of  the  sajd  tounes ;  and  in  the  tounes  where  no  magistrate  hath  his 
abode,  the  deputy  or  deputjes,  chosen  by  the  sajd  toune  or  tounes  for  the 
Genn"  Court  from  time  to  time,  w"*  the  3  cheife  millitary  officers  of  such 
toune  or  tounes,  or  any  three  of  them  together,  shall  have  power  as  the 
coinittee  of  mihtja  for  the  sajd  toune  or  tounes,  who  shall  have  power  of  coun- 
sailc  for  tlie  best  ordering  of  the  militia  of  their  seuerall  tounes,  till  the 
Gennerall  Coiut  or  counsell  of  the  countrje  cann  be  assembled,  and  vppon  all 
occasions  of  alarums,  or  any  invasion,  to  strengthen  their  quarters,  and  to  oppose 
any  approaching  or  assayling  of  them  in  a  way  of  hostillitje,  by  bearing  of 


88  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

amies  in.  companies,  or  refusing,  vppon  such  approaches,  to  come  vnder 
coinand,  or  give  accomjDt  what  they  are,  and  wherefore  they  are  in  such  pos- 
ture. Further,  euery  such  coinittee  of  miUtja  in  any  toune  witliin  this  juris- 
diccon,  where  any  alarum  shallbe  given  or  received,  or  shallbe  assayled,  as 
aforesajd,  is,  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  required  with  all  possible  speede  that 
may  be  to  give  intelligence  to  the  next  magistrate  and  the  majo"'  of  the  rege- 
ment,  where  such  alarum  is  taken  or  assault  made,  of  the  reason  thereof,  and 
state  of  the  place  so  assayled.  Further,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the 
authoritje  thereof,  that  there  shallbe  the  continuance  of  regementall  ofheers  in 
the  seuerall  countjes  vnder  the  title  of  majo"',  -who,  in  times  of  peace,  is  to 
attend  his  duty  and  exercise  of  power,  as  enjoyued  by  lawe,  title  Millitary, 
page  39.  And  in  case  of  alarum  or  any  assault  vppon  any  quarter  within  his 
regement,  he  shall  have  power,  and  is  hereby  required,  to  send  forth  to  procure 
intelligence  of  the  state  of  any  place  so  alariimed  or  assayled,  and  to  order 
asistance  to  them  from  any  othe  companje  or  companjes  of  his  regement,  as 
the  case  shall  requier ;  and  that  the  niajo"^  shall  give  constant  intelligence  to 
the  Gouero'^  or  counsell  of  the  countrje,  and  major  gennerall,  of  the  state 
of  the  matter  with  all  convenjent  speede.  Itt  is  further  ordered  by  the 
authoritje  aforesajd,  that  no  majo''  of  any  regement  shall  march  with  his  regi- 
ment out  of  the  county  wherein  he  hath  coinand,  nor  cawse  any  pte  thereof 
so  to  doe,  without  order  from  the  Gennerall  Courte,  counsell  of  the  countrje,  or 
majo'  gennerall,  except  it  be  in  pursuite  of  the  ennemy  vppon  a  rout ;  and  in 
case  of  death  or  absence  of  the  major,  the  eldest  capt  to  supply  his  place,  till 
a  new  be  chosen. 

Comissionfrom  Whereas  yow  are  chosen  and  allowed  by  the  authoritje  of  this  coiiion- 

C    rt^^o"        wealth  to  be  sarg'  major  of  this  regiment  of  ^  these  are 

s'g'  major.  therefore  to  will  and  require  yow  to  take  care  and  chardge  of  the  sajd  regiment, 
as  sargeant  majo'',  and  dilligently  to  intend  the  service  thereof,  and  to  excercise 
youi'  inferior  officers  and  souldjers,  in  peace  and  warr,  according  to  lawe, 
coinannding  them  to  obey  you  as  their  sargeant  majo"^,  for  the  service  of  this 
coiuonwealth  ;  and  yow  to  observe  and  obey  such  orders  and  directions  as  from 
tjme  to  tjme  yow  shall  receive  from  the  major  generall,  or  other  superio' 
officers,  or  authoritje  of  this  coiiion-wealth,  according  to  lawe. 

The  like  comission  the  Gennerall  Court  graunts  to  capt,  left,  &  ensignes, 
the  names  only  altered,  as  in  y*  origiuall  copies  appeares. 
L  00. J  *The  Courte  doth  with  all  thankfullnes  acknowledge  the  good  service  of 

GoQnors  gratu-  . 

itje.  John  Endecott,  Es^,  the  pisent  honnord  Gouernor,  in  respect  oi  his  great  care 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  89 

and  faithfullnes  in  the  discliarge  of  that  trust  which  was  coiiiittcd  to  him  the 
last  yeare,  and  doe,  in  the  behalfe  of  the  countrje,  render  him  harty  thanks 
for  the  same,  and  desire  his  kind  acceptance  of  one  hundred  markes,  as  a 
slender  mannifestacon  of  their  due  respects  vnto  him,  vntill  they  shallbe 
better  enabled  to  declare  it,  vf"^  is  ordered  shall  be  pajd  vnto  him  by  the 
Treasurer  out  of  the  next  countrje  rate. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Leueret,  Cap?  Leivt  Norton,  and  M'  Edward  Coffiittee  to 
Jackson  shall  be  a  coinittee  to  take  the  Treasurers  and  auditor    gennerall  ^^^^^j^^^^ 
accoumt,  and  make  report  thereof  to  the  next  session  of  this  Courte.  *<^'"''- 

In  ans"  to  the  peticou  of   INI'"  Sjmou  Aires,  craving   allowance  for  his  M' Aires 
paines  and  medicine  expended  on  M'^^  Cole  and  one  John  Sjmons,  by  the  en-  ''^ 
couragement  of  the  Magis'^  of  the  County  Court  in  Boston,  the  Courte  doth 
graunt  and  order,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  allow  and  pay  vnto   the  sajd  M' 
Aires  the  seine  of  nine  pounds  six  shillings  out  of  the  next  countrje  rate,  as 
his  recompence  for  the  same. 

Whereas  it  appeares  to  this  Courte,  vppon  good  information,  that  it  is  Coinittee  about 
necessary  that  some  care  be  taken  concerning  the  Castle  and  the  needefuU 
reparation  thereof,  itt  is  therefore  by  this  Courte  ordered,  that  Capt  Daniell 
Gookin,  Majo"^  Gennerall  Robt  Sedjuke,  Capt  W""  Hawthorne,  Cap?  Leiv? 
Frauncis  Norton,  Cap?  Jn°  Leuerett,  Leivt  Thomas  Clarke,  John  Johnson, 
Survejo''  Gennerall, Cap?  Humphry  Atherton,  Cap?  Edward  Johnson,  and  Cap? 
Eleazer  Lusher,  or  any  seven  of  them,  shall  be  a  coinittee  to  consider  what  is 
necessary  to  be  donne  concerning  the  sajd  Castle,  and  to  make  retourne  of 
what  they  conceave  concerning  the  same,  at  the  next  session  of  this  Courte. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  Dorothy  Pester  for  releife,  having  waited  w""  Ans'  to  M" 
patience  tenn  yeeres  for  the  retourne  of  hir  husband,  W""  Pester,  and  vsing  pgticon. 
all  meanes,  not  hearing  for  y"  last  five  or  six  yeeres  whether  he  be  dead  or 
alive,  nor  receaving  ought  from  him,  desiring  shee  might  not  still  be  held  in 
sucii  bondage,  the  Court  doth  graunt  the  peticoner  libertje  to  marry  when  God 
by  his  providence  shall  affoord  hir  an  oppertunitje. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticbn  of  the  inhabitants  of  Maiden,  the  Courte  doth  ThoSkinerto 

^ .  .  .      keepe  an  or- 

graunt  libertje  and  licence  to  Ihomas  bknmer  to  keepe  an  ordinary  there,  m  ajnary  at 
the  roome  and  stead  of  John  Hawthorne,  who  was  formerly  licensed  there.         Maiden. 

Cap?  Willard,  M""  Richard  Griffjn,  &  Thomas  Brookes  are  hereby  author-  3  men  to  end 

smale  ca\vse3 

ized  to  end  smale  cawses  at  Concord.  at  Concord. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Hawley  &  Dorothy,  his  wife,  late  the  Ans'  to  The. 

Hawlej'3 

wife  of  Thomas  Lambe,  of  Roxbury,  cra\'ing  this  Courts  confirmation  and  peticon. 
allowance  of  their  sale  of  fiveteene  accres  of  laud  to  W"  Parkes,  the  sonns  of 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  12 


90 


THE    KECOKDS    OP    THE    COLONY  OF 


1652. 

26  May. 

[*86.] 

Ans'  to  M' 
Hills  peticon. 


Ans'  to  Sud- 
bury peticon. 


Ans'  to  M' 

Hubbards 

peticon. 


27  3«»,  1652. 


The  Courts 
acceptance  of 
M'  Mathews 
acknowl- 
edgm",  &c. 


M'  Danforth 

recorder  of 
Midlesex. 


Ans'  to  the 

vintners 

peticon. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Pattcshalls 
peticon. 

Strawbe'y 
Bancke  Court. 


the  sajd  Lambe  having  received  sattisfaccoii  for  their  ]5ts,  the  Courte  doth 
allow  thereof,  and  confirme  the  same  to  the  sajd  W"  Parkes. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  M''  Josejih  Hills  &  Hannah,  liis  wife,  the  Courte 
doth  graunt  their  peticon,  viz.,  a  confirmation  of  the  howse  and  land  men- 
tjoned  in  the  peticon,  and  further  impowres  the  peticoners  to  make  sale  of  such 
land  as  yett  remajnes  vnsould,  formerly  the  land  of  ^i'^  Edward  Mellowes, 
by  the  consent  and  advice  of  M""  Buckley,  (pvided  sattisfaccon  be  made  to  the 
children  of  M"^  iSIellowes,  according  to  what  the  land  shallbe  sould  for  above 
what  it  is  aj)prised  in  the  inventory.) 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary  shall  deliuer  the  booke  of  records  of 
lands,  sales,  aljenations,  &d,  to  the  deputy  of  Sudbury,  which  concernes  that 
toune,  that  so  tlrey  may  deliuer  the  same  to  the  recorder  of  their  oune 
county. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  'M.''  W""  Hubbard,  the  Courte  doth  graunt  the 
sajd  M''  Hubbard  one  hundred  acres  more,  to  be  added  to  the  fewer  hundred 
acres  formerly  graunted  to  him,  and  all  the  five  hundred  acres  to  be  lajd  out 
by  Joseph  Jewett  and  John  Gage,  of  Ipswich,  on  the  north  side  of  the  bounds 
of  Hauerill,  and  within  two  miles  of  their  vtmost  Ijne. 

The  messengers  of  the  churches  of  Charles  Toune,  Cambridge,  Lynne, 
and  Reading  made  their  retournc  w"'  reference  to  the  Courts  order  of  theii 
late  dealing  w"'  M""  IVIathewes,  and  the  successe  thereof. 

The  Courte,  having  pcrvsed  M"^  Mathewes  confession,  and  considering  the 
sattisfaction  tendered  by  him,  and  finding  it  not  to  be  such  and  so  full  as 
might  be  expected,  yett  are  willing  to  accept  of  it  at  present  as  to  passe  it  by  j 
and  for  the  remittment  of  the  churches  and  pastors  fines,  they  see  no  cawse  to 
graunt  their  request  therein,  the  countrje  being  putt  to  so  great  trouble, 
chardges,  and  expenses  in  the  hearing  of  the  cawse. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  Thomas 
Danforth  shall  be  the  recorder  for  sales  of  lands  and  mortgages  for  the  county 
of  Midlesex. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Robt  Long,  Willjam  Phillips,  W"'  Hudson,  & 
Eofet  Turner,  for  liberty  to  advance  the  prize  of  wines,  that  so  they  may  not 
still  be  loosers,  litle  wines  coming  in,  the  Court  thinks  it  not  meete  to  graunt 
their  request,  but  pforme  their  bargaine,  for  if  much  more  wines  had  come  in, 
the  gajne  thereof  would  have  binn  theu-es,  &(3. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  M""  Robt  Patteshall,  the  Coiu-t  graunts  his  re- 
quest, viz.,  that  the  five  pounds  taken  from  him  by  the  counstable  of  Boston 
be  restored  to  him  againe  by  the  Treasurer. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  or  letter  of  M"^  Brjan  Pendleton,  in  behalfe  of  the 


'       Y 

27  May. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  91 

inhabitants  of  Strawbery  Banckc,  tlic  Courte  is  willing  to  consider  of  their  en-  1  6  .5  2. 
largment  when  they  propound  any  thing  to  consideration,  and  doe  order,  that 
Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,  and  M'^  Pendleton,  w">  the  judges  of  Doner  Courte, 
shall  keepe  Court  at  Straweberybancke  till  the  inhabitants  of  Strawberry 
Bancke  doe  present  such  persons  that  have  taken  the  oath  of  fidellitjc  to  this 
Court,  to  be  allowed  and  confirmed. 

*In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  John  Ilauthornc  for  the  remittment  of  his  halfe       [*87.] 
yeeres  rent  for  drawing  of  wjne,  &(5,  the  Court  doth  graunt  that  he  shall  only      2*"'  ^''52. 
pay  after  the  rate  of  ffiffty  shillings  p  butt  for  what  he  hath  drauue  to  tliis 
time. 

In  ans'^  to  the  peticon  of  Arnold  Elzay,  for  the  rectifying  seuerall  abuses  Ans'  to  Arnold 
in  making  of  fish,  the  Court  hath  made  a  lawe,  w"^"",  being  pformed,  will  ans"' 
the  ends  proposed. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  M'  Robt  Knight,  the  Courte  doth  graunt  the  Ans'  to  Rob' 
peticoner  three  hundred  acres  of  land  in  full  sattisfaction  for  what  he  desires  £„„_ 
in  his  jjeticon,  where  he  cann  finde  it  according  to  lawe,  which  if  he  shall 
refuse  to  accept  of,  he  shall  have  further  ans''  the  next  session  of  this  Court. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  the  proesident  and  fellowes  of  Harvard  Colledge,  Courts  ans'  to 

yo  nrGsidcnt 

for  the  reniooveall  of  soundry  diiHcultjes  and  obstruccons  in  payments  assigned  ^^^  ffeiiows  of 

vnto  them  by  the  countrje,  and  that  such  course  maybe  taken  as  the  ruinous  p  .^T 

and  streightned  buildings  of  the  colledge  maybe  enlardged  and  repajred,  the  peticon. 

Court,  considering  the  care  the  coinissioners  of  the  Vnited  Collonjes  took  at 

their  last  meeting  for  the  advauncement  of  learning,  &<3,  sending  into  England, 

that,  if  it  might  be,  some  heljoe  miglit  be  procured  from  the  corporation  out 

of  such  money  as  it  collected  there,  judge  it  meete  to  resijitt  the  answer  to 

this  peticon  vntill  wee  heare  irom  England ;  in  the  meane  tjme,  the  ourseers, 

president,  and  ffellowes  of  the  colledge  are  desired  to  write  to  the  elders  of 

the  seuerall  churches,  that  they  may,  withall  convenjent  speed,  comend  it  to 

the  consideratjon  of  the  tounes  where  they  dwell  for  a  voluntaiy  contribution, 

that  so  there  may  be  a  speedy  reparation  of  that  w*  psent  necessity  calls  for 

to  be  done. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Elizabeth  Fairefeild,  ffor  the  taking  of,  or  re-  Ans'  to 
mittment  of,  that  parte  of  the  Courts  censure  that  enjoyncd  hii-  husband,  Fairfeiids 
Daniell  Fairfield,  to  weare   a  roape  about  his  neck,  the  Court  graunts  hir  P«'"^'">- 
request. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  Burt,  the  Court  doth  graunt  that  the  Ans'  to 
peticoner  shall  have  liberty  to  make  sake  after  his  manner,  and  none  other  peticon. 
after  the  same  way,  for  tenn  yeeres,  so  as  the  peticoner  flfollowes  this  imploj- 
jn;nt,  and  doe  order  the  secretary  shall  write  a  letter  to  Glocester  to  desire 


92 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Ans'  to 
Margery 
Elliotts 
peticon. 


Alice, yp  "Welch 
•woman,  to  be 
sent  to  Eng- 
land. 


[*88.] 

Power  of  ad- 
ministracon  to 
y"  estate  of 
Eliz.  Goodale, 
formerly  grn' 
to  Abraha. 
Topau  &  Eliz. 
Lowle,  con- 
firmed &  re- 
newed. 


Highway  be- 
tweene  Red- 
ding &  "Winni- 
semett  to  be 
lajd  out. 
Vide  p»  156. 


Counstable  of 
Hamptons 
power  to  repay 
Koger  Shaw 
8",  &c. 


them  that  the  peticoner  may  sett  dovme  his  saltworke  at  the  very  cape,  where 
there  is  both  wood  and  water  fitting  for  that  worke,  without  any  inconvenience 
to  y"  toune,  but  will  rather  be  a  bcunefitt  to  them. 

In  aus"^  to  the  peticon  of  Margery  Elljott,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  adminis- 
trato''s  of  Samuel  Shermans  estate  give  in  their  accompt  to  the  next  Coimty 
Coiu't  of  the  sajd  Shermans  estate,  that  so  the  Court  may  take  order  to  secure 
the  childrens  portions,  and  then  this  Court  may  give  fui'ther  axis'  therevnto. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  George  Munnings  for  the  disposall  of  Alice, 
the  Welch  woman  now  iu  prison  on  suspition  of  firing  a  howse,  itt  is  ordered,v 
that  the  sajd  Alice  shall  be  sent  to  England,  to  retourne  to  hir  native  countije, 
at  the  countrjes  chai-ge. 

*In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Abraham  Toppan,  in  right  of  Susan,  his  wife, 
&  Thomas  Milward  and  Richard  Lowle,  oQseeres  to  the  last  will  of  Elizabeth 
Lowle,  and  on  hir  behalfe  humbly  desiring  that,  as  this  honnored  Court,  on 
their  peticon  in  the  yeere  1647,  did  graunt  vnto  the  sajd  Abraham  Toppan,  in 
right  of  Susan,  his  wife,  &  to  Elizabeth  Louie,  execcutrix  to  the  estate  of  hir 
husband,  John  Louie,  power  of  administration  to  the  estate  of  Elizabeth 
Goodale,  their  mother,  amounting,  as  p  inventory,  to  the  value  of  one  hun- 
dred ninety  one  pounds,  odd  mony,  excepting  some  goods,  w"^*"  amounted  to 
thirty  pounds  or  thereabouts,  w'=''  this  Court  reserved  liberty  to  John  Goodall 
any  time  w^'in  three  yeeres  to  make  challendge  therevnto  from  that  time  ;  so 
now,  that  time  being  expii-ed,  &  no  record  found  of  the  Courts  graunt,  that 
this  Court  would  be  pleased  so  to  order  it  that  the  graunt  above  mentioned 
may  be  entred  in  the  Court  reccords,  and  stand  firme  to  all  intents,  as  if  it  had 
binn  entred  at  the  time  above  mentioned.  The  graxmt  above  mentioned  being 
fi-esh  in  the  remembrance  of  the  ^sent  secretary  &  seuerall  deputjes,  the  Court 
graunts  the  petiooners  their  request. 

Whereas  this  Coiu-te  did  long  since  appointe  soundry  persons  to  lay  out 
the  highway  from  Eedding  to  Winnisemet,  which  is  not  yet  determined,  & 
some  of  the  persons  mentioned  in  the  sajd  order  are  dead,  and  forasmuch  as  it 
was  ordered  by  Cambridge  Court  that  it  should  be  forthwith  donne  by  the 
tounes  of  Redding  and  Maulden,  itt  is  now  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  the 
laying  out  of  the  sajd  highway  shallbe  donne  by  the  tounes  of  Redding  and 
Maiden,  according  to  the  lawe  in  that  case  provided,  any  act  of  this  Court 
to  the  contraiy  notwithstanding. 

Whereas  the  survejor  gennerall  did  arest  Roger  Shawe,  of  Hampton, 
for  eight  pounds  for  a  barrell  of  powder  which  was  due  from  the  toune  of 
Hampton,  and  the  sajd  Roger  Shawe  did  acknowledge  a  judgment  for  the 
same,  this  Courte  doth  order  and  require,  and  give  full  power  and  authoritje 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  93 

t3,  the  couustable  of  Hampton  for  the  pajment  of  the  aforesajd  some  of  eight 
pounds,  together  w"'  two  sliilling  .sixcpeuce  for  entry  of  the  poticon,  and  also 
so  much  more  as  may  defray  the  charge  of  transporting  the  same  to  the  sur- 
vejor  gennerall  aforesajd,  vnto  the  sajd  Roger  Shawe,  w"'in  thirty  dajes  after 
notice  given,  and  that  in  corue  or  catle  at  prise  current. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  Capt  Bozoone  Allen  and  Ensigne  W™  Comittee  to 
Davies  shall  be  a  coiiiittee  to  consider  of  all  the  defects  that  are  found  in  the  l^'^'^''  ^  ?  "^^^ 

m  tanning 

tanning  of  leather,  and  to  present  such  wajes  and  meanes  to  the  next  sessions  leather. 
of  this  Court  as  may  pbably  prevent  all  manner  of  abuses  concerning  the 
same. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticou  and  coniplainte  of  Thomas  Danforth,  recorder  of  Ans'  to  Tho. 
the  comity  of  !Midlesex,  complayning  against  George  Bowjers,  of  Cambridg,  for  petiSon. 
rending  a  deed  coiiiitted  to  his  trust,  with  scuerall  articklcs,  betweene  the 
sajd  George  Bowjers  &  Benanuell  Bowjers,  his  sonnc,  the  Court,  by  warrant, 
sent  for  the  parties,  who  appearing,  after  the  Court  had  heard  the  cawse,  they 
determined  that  the  sajd  Bowjers  should  be  bound  to  his  good  behaviour,  w"** 
he  acknowledged,  to  be  in  tenn  pounds,  till  y"  next  County  Court  at  Cam- 
bridge, and  should  pay  eight  shillings  cost  for  wittnesses  in  the  case,  and  two 
shillings  sixe  pence  for  entring  the  peticon,  &  2'  6'^  for  y"  evidences,  and  the 
artickies  and  deed  written  out,  &  declaa-ed,  &  ordered  to  be  firme  to  all  intents 
and  purposes  to  the  sajd  Bennanuell  Bowjers,  as  they  were  before  the 
tearing  thereof. 

*George  Bowjers,  of  Cambridge,  being  complajncd  on  for  putting  in  a       [*89.] 
vote  on  the  eleccon  day  for  the  Gouernor,  acknowledged  the  fact,  not  only  George 

.  .  Bowjers  fined 

this  j^eere  but  euery  yecre  since  he  came  into  these  pts,  pleaded  ignorance  lo". 
of  ^    Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  sajd  George  Bowjers,  for  his  offence  therein,  shall 
pay  the  soine  of  tenn  pounds. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Jn°  Warner,  the  Court  judgeth  it  not  meete  to  Ans'to  Jn» 
take  of  his  bannishment,  but  graunts  him  libertje  to  transport  himselfe  and  pptij,,,, 
family  for  England  from  any  of  oui-  ports,  when  occasion  shallbe  presented  ; 
provided,  that  vppou  his  coining  to  Boston,  or  any  other  of  our  ports,  w"'  his 
family,  for  transportacbu,  he  shall  forthwith  take  vp  his  aboadc  in  the  shipp, 
and  thence  not  to  come  forth  vntill  his  departure,  except  vppon  vrgent 
occasion,  for  his  vojage,  by  order  of  two  magistrates. 

Concerning  the  north  lyne   of   this  jurisdiccon,  itt  was  this  day  voted,    31  3««,  (.52.) 
vppon  pvsall  of  our  charter,  that  the  extent   of  the  Ijne  is  to  be  from  the  North  ijne  of 

our  patent. 

northermost  parte  of  the  Riuer  Merremacke,  and  three  miles  more  north, 
where  it  is  to  be  found,  be  it  a  hundred  miles,  more  or  lesse,  from  the  sea, 
and  thence  vppon  a  streight  Ijne  east  &  west  to  each  sea. 


94  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1652.  There  being  an  accbn  coiiienct  by  M'' Joseph  Mason,  agent  or  attourney 

'       "<        '    of  M"  Ann  Mason,  sole  executrix  of  Capt  John  Mason,  ag"^'  M"^  Eichard 

31  May.  -  ■  ^  .  „ 

M'  Mason  &      Leader,  at  a  County  Court  in  Norfolk,  in  an  accon  of  trespasse  on  the  case 
M'  Leaders       ^qj.  buildiu^  and  erectiuEf  certaine  howses  on  their  lands  at  Newitchawannoke, 

triallab'an         .... 

accon  of  tres-  in  the  province  of  Majne,  &^,  the  partjes  there  appeared,  &  the  sajd  Court 
ordered,  on  consideration  of  a  coiiiission  graunted  to  seuerall  select  members 
of  this  jurisdiccon,  by  the  Gennerall  Court,  to  clame  and  order  certajne  lands 
to  the  eastward,  whereof  this  is  a  parte,  together  w"*  the  plea,  both  of  plan- 
tiffe  and  defendant,  the  one  denying  the  land  in  controuersy  to  be  w^'in  this 
jurisdiccon,  &  so  the  accon  not  belonging  to  the  cognizance  of  that  Court,  the 
other  affirming  &  pleading  the  accon  to  belong  to  the  cognizance  of  the  Court, 
referred  the  consideration  of  the  case  to  the  next  Gennerall  Comte,  and 
ordered  the  psoas  to  attend  their  cawse  the  3'^  day  of  the  first  sessions,  at 
one  of  the  clocke,  as  in  the  retourne  of  y*  Court  more  fully  appeares.  M' 
Joseph  Mason  appeared  at  the  tjme  appointed,  &  though  M"^  Leader  appeared 
not,  &  so  his  bond  was  forfeited,  yett  M"'  Mason  exprest  he  would  nor  should 
not  take  any  advantage  of  the  forfeiture  of  the  bond,  so  as  M"^  Leader  appeared 
and  pleaded  to  y"  accon  on  the  next  third  day,  at  one  of  the  clocke,  att  which 
tjme  both  the  partjes  appeared  ;  and  after  the  Court  had  duely  heard  all  the 
evidences  that  were  produced,  and  weighed  them  w""  what  they  could  say, 
before  the  Court  exprest  themselves  in  the  case,  the  Deputy  GoQn'^  informed 
M'  Mason  that  the  land  in  quaestion  was  voted  to  be  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon,  & 
demaunding  of  him  whether  he  did  reluct  from  this  jurisdiccon  or  submitt 
to  it.  M"'  Mason  answ''d,  he  did  acknowledge  it  to  be  in  this  jurisdiccon,  and 
submitted  the  lands  in  question  to  this  jurisdiccon.  In  fine,  having  binn 
much  debate  concerning  the  difference  betweene  M'  Mason,  agent  for  M" 
Ann  Mason,  &  M'"  Richard  Leader,  itt  was  voted,  by  the  whole  Court,  that  the 
case  of  difference  betweene  M''  Mason  and  M"^  Leader  shallbe  suspended,  and 
referred  to  the  next  Gennerall  Coiirt  of  Election  for  a  finall  issue. 

Norfolk  Itt  is  ordered,  that  Eichard  Bellingham,  Esq>,  &  Capt  Thomas  Wiggin 

shall  kecpe  the  County  Courts  in  Norfolk  for  tliis  yeere  ensuing,  w"*  the 
associates  there. 
[*90.]  *In  ans''  to  the  peticbu  of  Edmond  Jackson,  desiring   to  be   dischargd 

Answ  to  of  his  trust  concerning  a  mill  and  lauds  in  Ilingham,  made  ouer  to  him  and 

Edmond  Jack-    -^    ,         ^-^ 

Bonspeticon.  Johii  Gallop,  deceased,  by  Thomas  Joy,  for  the  vse  of  Joane,  liis  wife,  and 
their  children,  as  in  the  deed  more  amply  appeareth,  the  Court  graunts  his 
request,  provided  the  ffeoffment  be  given  into  the  County  Court,  and  pro- 
vision made  that  Thomas  Joy  may  not  sell  the  mill  and  lands  w^'out  the 
consent  of  the  Courte,  but  only  repajed  the  same,  and  have  out  of  rent  thereof 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  95 

for  his  charge,  but  the  propriety  to  be  his  wives  and  chiklreiis,  according  to      165  2. 

his  first  decde.  * y ' 

In  ans"'  to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Doner,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Eichard  ''^' 

Douer  Coiirt. 

BeUingham,    Esquire,   Capt  Thomas  Wiggins,    M''  George    Smith,   and   M"' 
Richard  Walderne  shall  keepe  the  Court  at  Douer  for  the  yeere  ensuing. 

In  ans"'  to  the  pcticon  of  M'^  Addam  Winthrop,  that  the  coinissioners  Ans'  to  M' 
retoui-ne,  laying  out  the  bounds  of  the  Pondes  Farme,  belonging  to  Major  ^etidon™^* 
Stephen  Winthrop,  might  be  recorded,  the  Court  graunts  his  request. 

Wee,  whose  names  are  vndcrwritten,  being  chosen  by  the  tounes  of  M'Humphryes 
Salem  and  Ljn,  at  the  appointment  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  to  lay  out  the  '^^"^'"'^  '^''''^  °"'' 
Ponds  Farme,  lately  M'  Humphrejes,  do  declare,  that  wee  have  lajd  it  out  as 
followeth  :  From  a  pine  tree,  marked  on  both  sides,  standing  on  a  pointe  of 
land,  by  Stones  ^leadow,  marked  as  abovesajd,  and  so  on  the  south  side  of 
Stones  Meadow,  and  so  by  trees,  as  they  are  marked  on  the  sides,  to  the  plajne 
on  the  south  side  of  the  pond  along  by  a  swampside,  and  so  by  the  east  side  of 
the  plajne,  and  from  thence  as  the  trees  are  marked,  and  so  to  a  rock  betweene 
the  foresajd  farme  and  t"lie  land  of  Robert  Moulton,  and  from  thence  crosse 
the  end  of  the  high  hill  to  a  marked  pine,  by  Long  Meadow,  on  the  north 
side,  ouer  against  the  former  pine,  marked  as  abovesajd  ;  and  this  not  to 
pjudice  the  agreement  made  betweene  M"'  Winthrop  and  the  toune  of  Lynn, 
in  the  echange  of  part  of  Stones  Meadow  for  part  of  Long  Meadowe.  Wit- 
nes  our  hands,  this  15*  day  of  the  2''-  moneth,  1652. 

WM  HATHORNE, 

ED:  NEEDEHAM, 

EDMOND  W  FARINGTONS, 
W"  LONGLEY. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Pumhom  and  Wotapuntum  iFor  sattisfaction  for  Ans'  to  Pom- 
his  attendance  on  the  complaint  of  Ninnicrot,  who  appeared  not,  itt  is  ordered, 
that  Ninnicrot  shall  pay  the  soiiie  of  twenty  shillings  to  Pomhom,  and  Wota- 
puntum, and  their  interpreter,  for  theire  charges. . 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  James  Pemberton,  who  produced  seuerall  tes-  Ans'  to  Pem- 
timonjes  for  his  interest  and  propriety  to  an  iland  called  Pembertons  Hand,  itt  peticon. 
is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  if  Pemberton,  his  attourney,  heires,  or  assignes 
shall  make  proofe,  vppon  oath,  according  to  lawe,  that  he  had  possession  and 
improovement  of  the  sajd  iland  by  the  consent  and  approbation  of  the 
anncieut  inhabitants,  or  planters,  resident  in  or  about  the  ilassachusetts  Bay 
about  twenty  fower  yeeres  agoe,  then  the  sajd  iland  shall  be,  and  is  declared- 


96 


THE    RECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


1652. 

31  May. 

[*91.] 

Hugh  Parsons 
trjed  &  ac- 
quitted, 
1  June,  1652. 


Ans'  to 

Andever 

peticon. 


Graunt  to 
Rowley. 


Coniittee  to 
lay  out  the 
west  end  of 
Hampton 
bounds. 
The  north  Ijne 
of  Hampton 
lajd  out. 


to  be,  his  and  his  heires  forcuer,  the  oathes  to  be  taken  at  the  next  County 
Court,  who  shall  record  the  same,  and  certefy  the  next  sessions  of  this  Courte 
thereof. 

*Whereas  Hugh  Parsons,  of  Springfeild,  was  arrajned  and  trjed  at  a 
Court  of  Asistants,  held  at  Boston,  12  of  May,  1652,  for  not  having  the  feare 
of  God  before  his  ejes,  but  being  seduced  by  the  instigation  of  the  divill,  in 
March,  1651,  and  diuers  tjmes  before  and  since,  at  Springfeild,  as  was  con- 
ceived, had  familhar  and  wicked  converse  w"'  the  divill,  and  hath  vsed  diuerse 
divillish  practizes,  or  witchcrafts,  to  the  hiut  of  diuerse  psons,  as  by  seuerall 
wittnesses  and  circumstances  ajipeared,  was  left  by  the  graund  jury  for  further 
triall  for  his  life. 

The  jury  of  trjalls  found  him  guilty.  The  Magisls  not  consenting  to  the 
verdict  of  the  jury,  the  cawse  came  legally  to  the  Gennerall  Court.  The 
Gennerall  Courte,  after  the  prisoner  was  called  to  the  barr  for  triall  of  his  life, 
pervsing  and  considering  the  evidences  brought  in  against  the  sajd  Hugh 
Parsons,  accused  for  witchcraft,  they  judged  he  was  not  legally  guilty  of 
witchcrafte,  and  so  not  to  dye  by  lawe. 

In  aus"'  to  the  peticon  of  the  touue  of  Andover,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Cap? 
Edward  Johnson,  Niccolas  Holt,  of  Andever,  and  Thomas  Danforth,  of  Cam- 
brjdge,  be  a  coinittee  to  lay  out  the  bounds  of  Andover,  what  they  judge 
sequall,  betweene  Andever  and  Cambridge,  not  tj-ing  them  to  fower  or  six 
miles,  but  what  any  two  of  the  coinittee  shall  judge  ffiq^uall,  making  retourne 
of  what  they  shall  doe  herein  to  the  next  sessions  of  this  Courte.  And  the 
Court  doth  further  graunt,  that  the  five  or  six  hundred  acres  lajd  out  by 
Eowley  w^out  their  Ijne,  neere  Andover  Toune,  shall  belong  to  Andover  ; 
and  Rowley  shall  lay  out  their  graunt  on  the  south  east  angle  of  their  bounds, 
neere  to  Ipswich  Riuer ;  and  that  the  bounds  of  Andover  shall  extend  south- 
ward six  miles  from  their  meeting  howse,  provided  it  pjudice  not  this  last 
graunt  of  Rowley,  nor  the  graunt  formerly  made  to  Reading  or  Wooborne. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Samuell  Winsly,  Thomas  Bradbury,  and  Robert  Pike 
shall  have  further  llbertje  to  lay  out  the  west  end  of  Hampton  bounds,  till  the 
next  sessions  of  this  Couite. 

The  Court  approoves  of  the  coiiiittees  retourne,  heere^^lder  written,  re- 
specting the  north  lyne  of  Hampton  bounds,  so  as  it  intrench  not  on  any  for- 
mer graimt.  Wee,  whose  names  are  heerevnder  written,  being  appointed  by 
the  Gennerall  Courte  to  lay  out  the  northermost  Ijne  of  Hampton  bounds, 
towards  Pascataquake,  have  determined  that  the  north  Ijne  shall  extend  five 
miles  from  Hampton  meeting  howse,  and  from  thence  vppon  an  east  Ijne  to 
the  sea,  and  w"*  the   westerlje   lyne,  vntill  they   come  w"*in  two  miles  of 


THE    MASSACIlUSErrS    BAY   IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  97 

Exciters  present  meeting  howse,  and  the  rest  of  the  Ijne,  which  is  to  extend  as      16  52. 

farr  as  Salisbury  bounds,  wee  leave  to  farther  consideration.  ^       ' 

1  June. 

SAMUELL  WINSLOW, 
SAMUELL   HALL, 
THO:   BRADBURY. 


In  aus"^  to  the  peticou  of  Thomas  Gayner  respecting  satisfaccon  from  M''  Answ  to  M' 

Gajners 
petiuon. 


Aspinwall,  &5,  both  IM'  Gajuer  and  M''  Aspinwall  appeafed,  and  after  the     ^'  "^  ^ 


Coui-t  had  heard  -what  both  partjes  could  say,  M'  Knight,  M''  Gajners 
attoui-ney,  proffered  the  issue  of  the  case,  if  M'  Aspinwall  would  depose  that 
the  accquittance  he  produced  before  the  Court,  vnder  M'  Gajners  hand,  had 
relation  to  the  shipp  Planter,  as  well  as  to  other  accompts.  M'  Aspinwall  de- 
posed before  the  Gennerall  Courte,  saith  that  the  acquitance  he  brought  in 
and  produced  before  the  Gennerall  Courte  was  the  gennerall  release  given  him 
by  M''  Gajner,  and  was  for  all  accompts  and  demaunds  whatsoeuer,  as  well  in 
relation  to  the  shipp  Planter  as  any  other,  not  only  in  his  oune  aphencon 
and  knowledge,  but  also,  so  farr  as  he  knoweth,  to  M"^  Gayners  also. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Willjam  Blanton  to  the  first  pte  of  the  peticon,       [*92.] 
the  Court  declares,  that  he  was  justly  presented  by  the  grand  jury,  and  to  Ans-  to  w» 

^      ^  Blantons 

the  second  parte,  that  he  was  justly  fined  by  the  comissioners.  petiSon. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Jonathan  Wade,  that  the  400  acres  formerly  Ans'  to  M' 
graunted  him  by  this  Comte  (for  the  cUsbui-sing  of  fifty  pounds  for  the  good    g^j^^ 
of  this  collouy  at  the  first)  might  be  lajd  out  to  him  on  any  side  of  Nashaway 
bounds,  w^'in  a  mile  thereof,  or  two,  the  Court  graunts  his  request. 

In  ans"^  to  the  petition   of  Leonard  Buttles,  era-sing  releife  &  redresse  Ans' to 
from  the  sentence  of  the  coiuissioners  in  Boston,  a  remittment  of  his  fines  ille-  gutties 
gaily  imposed,  and  just  restriccon  of  their  power,  &6,  and  further  in  Iris  ^*^  ^''°°' 
peticon  exprest  himself  ready  to  majntajne,  that  Capt  Keajne  was  as  great  a 
delinquent  as  he,  the  Court  referred  the  examination  of  the  ptlculars  thereia 
contajned  to  M""  Nowell,  Capt  Wiggins,  Left  Clap,  M""  Bradbury,  INIaximilljan 
Jewett,  ~S[y  Cleomcnts,  M'  Johnson,  the  siu'vejor  gennerall,  and  M''  Edward 
Dennison,  who  made  their  report  to  the  Court,  both  in  relacon  to  his  accusat- 
ing  of  Capt  Kejne,  and  his  misreporting  the  acts  of  the  coiuissioners.     The 
Coui-t  declared,  that  whereas  Capt  Roibt  Keajne  was  accused  to  this  Court  for 
drunckenes,  the  evidences  having  binn  pervsed,  and  finding  that  he  is  prooved 
to  have  binn  three  tjmes  druncke,  and  twice  to  have  diuncke  to  excesse,  fibr 
which  oflences  this  Courte  doth  fine  him  thirty  sixe  shillings  and  eight  pence, 
the  charge  of  wittnesses  appearing  by  examinatjon  to  be  the  some  of  fivety  five 
shillings  two  pence,  which  this  Court  orders  Capt  Keajne  to  dischardge.    And 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  13 


98  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


■ Y ■ 

1  June. 


1  G  5  2.      ■\vliereas  Capt  Keajnc  Lath  petitioued  this  Courtc  to  lay  doiuie  his  phice  as  comis 

sioiier,  the  Court  assents  therto,  as  judging  him  not  meete  to  contjnew  therein. 

And  as  ans''  to  that  part  of  the  peticon  respecting  Leonard  Butles,  the 

Court  determined,  that  the  acte  of  the  comissioners,  in  fining  the  sajd  Buttles 

forty  shillings,  was  both  just  and  warrantable,  w*  they  order  the  sajd  Butles 

to  pay ;  and  further  determined,  the  second  fine  imposed  on  him  by  the  coiuis- 

sioners,  viz.,  thirty  shillings,  for  his  affronting  authorltje  by  many  vnmanncrly 

and  threatening  Speeches,  was    also  just   and   warrantable;  and,  lastly,  this 

Court   doth  order,  that   the    sajd   Leonard   Butles,  for   his   misreporting   the 

coinissioners  to  the  Gennerall  Court,  chardging  them  to  act  by  an  arbitrary 

power,  &d,  should  pay,  as  a  fine,   five  pounds,   and  make  aknowledgment  at 

tlTe  Coiiiissioners  Court,  when  they  call  him  to  it,  that  he   did  sinfully  and 

scandolously  in  falsely    accusing    them    to    act   by  an    arbitrary  power,    and 

expresse  himselfe  sorry  for  it ;  otherwise  to  be  responsall  to  the  next  sessions 

of  the  Gennerall  Courte. 

Ans'  to  Hump.  In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Humphry  Atherton  &  John  Wisewall,  in  behalf 

J  »W'       11    °^  ''^^  toune  of  Dorchester,  for  the  remittment  of  the  fine  of  five  j)ounds  im- 

abt  Neponsett  pgsed  on  them  by  the  County  Court,  for  neglecting  to  make  a  bridge  ouer 
Bridge. 

Neponsett  Riuer,  in  the  way  betweene  Dedham  and  Eehoboth,  the  Coiut, 
finding  that  the  obstruccous  was  not  on  the  tounes  part  only,  but  rather  by 
the  psons  that  was  to  lay  out  the  way,  and  vnderstanding  it  is  lately  effected, 
doe  reraitt  the  sajd  fine  at  fsent,  vnlesse  on  the  first  of  the  seventh  month 
next  it  shall  appeare,  that  the  building  of  the  bridge  is  still  neglected,  in  w'='^ 
case  the  fine  is  againe  to  take  place ;  and  to  the  second  pte  of  the  peticon,  this 
Court  declares,  that  the  making  bridges  in  coiiiou  liighwajes  from  toune  to 
toune  ouer  like  streames  is  no  more  than  is  vsuall  in  like  case,  and  in  tequitje 
ought  to  be. 
r*93.1  *Iii  answer  to  the  petition  of  Mary  Wooddy,  late  wife  to  John  Woody, 

Ans'  to  Mary    of  Roxbury,  deceased,  the  Courte   conceaues,  for  any  thing  yet  appeares   to 
petition.  them  to   the  contrary,  that  the  petitioner  hath  such  a  proporcou  out  of  the 

estate  of  her  late  husband  as  the  estate  will  beare  or  the  lawc  provided ;  and 
that  there  should  be  no  alteracon  of  the  will,  as  is  desired  in  the  petition,  but 
that  there  be  an  agreem'  amongst  all  pties  concerned  therein,  to  improve  the 
estate  for  the  benefitt  of  the  wife  &  childe. 
Cofflittee  to  Its  Ordered  by  this  Coiu-t,  for  the  better  discoflie  of  the  north  Ijaie  of  our 

pattent,  that  Capt  Symon  Willard  &  C'apt  Edward  Johnson  be  appointed  as 
coinissioners  to  j)cure  such  artists  &  other  assistants  as  they  shall  judge  meete  to 
goe  w*""  them,  to  finde  out  the  most  northerly  pte  of  Merimacke  Eiuer,  and  that 
they  be  supplyed  withall  maiier  of  necessaries  by  the  Tressurer  fitt  for  their 


lay  out  our 
north  Ijne. 


1  June. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  99 

journey,  and  that  they  vse  their  vttmost  skill  and  abillitie  to  take  a  true  obser-      1  G  5  2. 
vation  of  the  latitude  of  the  place,  and  that  they  doe  it  withall  convenient 
speed,  and  make  returnc  thereof  at  the  next  sessions  of  this  Court. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  Conduite  Streete  in  Bos- 
ton, the  Court  doth  graunt  theire  request,  that  whereas  James  Euerill,  Joshua 
Scottow,  W""  Hudson,  Hannah  Hanbury,  Edmond  Jackson,  Willjam  Awbrey, 
in  behalfe  of  the  vndertakers  of  the  iron  workes,  possessing  the  right  of  Val- 
cntjne  Hill  and  Joseph  Wormell,  Willjam  Cotton,  J"°  I^owe,  Leonard  Buttles, 
Thomas  Yeow,  Richard  Norton,  and  J""  Bateman,  tookc  into  serious  consid- 
eration theire  oinie  neccssitjes  for  the  dayly  vse  of  fresh  water  for  theire  seuer- 
all  faniiljcs,  and  especially  the  eminent  dainger  if  any  scathfier  should  happcTi 
amongst  them,  (w'^''  God  forbid,)  having  no  water  in  any  readjnes  at  all  tjmcs 
to  besteade  them  in  such  extrcame  dainger,  and  duely  weighing  that  the  pro- 
curing of  water  into  the  sajd  streete,  not  only  to  be  a  burden  to  heavy  for  any 
one  to  beare,  but  the  priviledge  to  be  to  great  for  any  one  solely  to  enjoy,  itt 
is  therefore  ordered  and  enacted  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that 
from  henceforth  the  sajd  inhabitants  above  mentioned  shallbe  a  corporation, 
and  incorporated  into  one  body  or  company,  and  that  it  shall  and  may  be  law- 
full  for  the  sajd  company  yeerely  vppon  the  first  day  of  July,  if  not  the  Lords 
day,  or  if  it  be,  then  on  the  second  day  of  the  moneth,  to  meete  together,  and 
the  whole  body  so  mett,  by  the  major  pte  of  the  votes,  to  elect  two  of  the  pro- 
prietors of  the  sajd  body  to  be  wardens,  or  masters  of  the  sajd  waterworks  for 
that  ensuing  yeere,  and  no  longer,  without  a  new  election,  who  shall  take 
order  for  the  due  pajment  of  theire  anuuall  rent  to  ^I"'  Willjam  Ting,  according 
to  theire  couenant  and  agreement  w""  him,  and  to  see  that  the  conditions  on 
both  parts  be  truly  pformed,  and  from  tjme  to  tjme  to  see  and  take  order  that 
all  necessary  repaires  about  the  sajd  waterworkes  be  speedily  made  and  fin- 
ished, and  that  it  shall  be  laufull  for  the  sajd  wardens  for  the  tjme  being,  when 
and  as  often  as  occasion  shall  requier,  to  warne  all  the  members  of  the  sajd 
body  to  meete  together,  as  well  to  consult,  Advise,  and  conclude  *of  any  neccs-  [*94.] 
sary  matter  or  worke  to  be  donne  in  and  about  the  sajd  waterworkes,  as  to  sat- 
tisfy  such  theire  disbursements  vnto  them,  and  that  it  shall  and  may  be  lawfuU 
for  the  sajd  wardens  for  the  tjme  being  to  distrajne  the  goods  of  any  person  or 
persons,  refusing  to  pay  his  due  j)roportjon,  being  lawfully  demaunded,  and 
truely  and  plainely  made  knoune  vnto  him,  rendring  the  ouerplus.  And  it  is 
further  ordered,  that  if  any  propi-ietor  of  lands,  w*in  the  sajd  streete  or  els- 
where,  shall  please  to  come  into  the  sajd  body,  it  shallbe  lawfuU  and  in  the 
power  of  the  sajd  wardens  for  the  tjme  being,  with  the  consent  of  the  major 
pte  of  the  company,  to  receive  them  vppon  such  condicons  as  shall  be  proper- 


1  June. 


100  THE  RECOEDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1652.  tionably  answerable  to  the  charges  and  disbursments  in  procuring  and  majn- 
tajning  the  same.  And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  if  any  person  or  psons 
shallbe  found  guilty  of  corrupting,  wasting,  or  spoyling  of  the  sajd  water,  or 
waterworkes,  or  damnifying  the  pipes,  cisternes,  or  fountajnes,  it  shall  be  law- 
full  to  and  for  the  sajd  warden  for  the  tjme  being  to  impleade  such  persons  for 
and  in  the  name  of  the  whole  company  or  body,  and  damage  xecouered  to  be 
jmprooved  to  the  bennefitt  of  the  whole  body,  as  likewise  to  be  jmpleaded,  and 
damage  lost  to  be  aequally  borne  by  the  whole  company ;  and  for  such  as  shall 
take  water  there  w"'out  license,  it  shallbe  lawful!  for  the  wardens  for  the  tjmc 
being,  or  whom  they  shall  appointe,  after  warning  given  them,  to  take  away 
and  w"'hold  such  vessells  from  them  as  they  shall  bring  to  carry  away  such 
water  with.  And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  if  any  scathficr  should  happen, 
that  then  it  shallbe  lawfuU  for  any  pson  or  psons  w^out  leave  to  take  water, 
and,  if  neede  requier,  to  breake  vp  as  many  places  of  the  couer  of  the  sajd 
conduite  as  shallbe  needefull  for  the  speedy  help  and  convejance  of  water  as 
such  a  case  of  dainger  requires  and  the  place  will  affoord.  And  further,  it  is 
ordered,  that  it  shall  and  may  be  lawfull  for  the  wardens  for  the  time  being  to 
graunt  license  for  a  tjme  for  such  poore  persons  as  are  not  able  to  purchase  a 
proprietie  therein  ;  provided,  that  no  man,  by  this  act,  be  barred  from  his  pro- 
prietje  or  libertje  for  improoving  it  in  preserving  of  his  due  right  in  all  water 
courses  w"'in  his  oune  land,  and  that  euery  man  hath  libertje  of  replevin,  and 
after  sentence  to  appeale  to  the  next  County  Court.  The  Comt  is  adjourned  to 
y«  19"^  October. 


19  October.    Mt   the  secoiul   Sessions  of  the  Gennerall  Court,    held   at    Boston, 

the  19'"  of  October,  1652. 

For  advance-         A      DECLAE.ATJON   concerning  the  advancement  of   learning  in   New 

raent  of  learn-        /  % 

ing.  jL  jL    England  by  the  Generall  Courte.    If  it  should  be  graimted  that  learning, 

namely,  skill  in  the  tounges  and  liberall  artes,  is  not  absolutely  necessary  for 
the  being  of  a  coiiion-wealth  and  churches,  yett  wee  conceive  that,  in  the 
judgment  of  the  godly  wise,  it  is  beyond  all  qua;stion  not  only  laudable,  bu't 
necessarje  for  the  wellbeing  of  the  same  ;  and  although  New  England  (blessed 
be  God)  is  competently  furnished  (for  this  present  age)  with  men  in  place, 
and  vppon  occasion  of  death  or  otherwise,  to  make  supply  of  magistrates,  as- 
sociates in  Courts,  phisitions,  and  officers  in  the  coiiionwealth,  and  of  teaching 
elders  in  the  chiuxhes,  yett  for  the  better  discharge  of  our  trust  for  the  next 
genneration,  and  so  to  posterltje,  being  the  first  founders  doe  weare  away  apace. 


Y — ' 

19  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  101 

and  that  it  growes  more  and  more  difficult  to  fill  places  of  most  eminencje  as  ]  G  5  2. 
they  are  emptje  or  wantjng  ;  and  this  Courte,  findeing  by  manuifest  experjcncc 
that  though  the  noumber  of  schoUers  at  our  coUedge  doth  eucrease,  yett  as 
scone  as  they  growe  vpp  ready  for  publicke  vse,  they  leave  the  countrje,  and 
seeke  for  and  accept  of  jmplojment  elswhere,  so  that  if  tjmely  provition  be  not 
made,  it  will  tend  much  to  the  disparagement,  if  not  to  the  ruine  of  this  coiuon- 
•wealth,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  and  heereby  enacted  by  this  Court,  that  a  vol- 
untary collection  be  coiuended  to  the  inhabitants  of  this  jurisdiccon  for  the 
raising  of  such  a  soine  as  maybe  jmplojed  for  the  majntenance  of  the  presi- 
dent, certajne  *ffello\ves,  and  poore  schollers  in  Harvard  Colledge,  and  for  that  [*95.] 
purpose  doe  further  order,  that  euery  toune  of  this  jurisdiccon  doc  choose  one 
meete  person  to  take  the  voluntary  subscriptions  of  such  as  shall  vndenvrite 
any  soiSe  or  soiiies  of  money  for  that  purpose,  and  to  make  retom-ne  thereof 
to  the  next  Courte ;  and  forasmuch  as  all  the  collonjes  are  concerned  therein, 
this  Courte  doth  order  the  secretarje  to  signifie  to  the  Gouemo™  of  the  seuerall 
colonjes  our  endeavo'^  heerein,  and  to  coiiiend  the  same  vnto  them  for  their 
helpe  and  furtherance  in  so  good  a  worke. 

Whereas  the  meetings  of  the  freemen  for  the  nominatjon  of  magistrates  Tjme  for  elec- 

.  1       i»  XT  1  1   ^^^  ^^  tounes. 

and  associates  for  County  Courts  is  appointed  in  the  month  oi  JNouembcr,  and 
the  votes  so  made  to  lye  till  the  last  weeke  of  the  first  month  ffoUowing, 
which  distance  of  tjme  is  not  ncedefull,  and  may  admitt  of  soundiy  incon- 
veniencjes,  for  preventjoii  whereof,  itt  is  hcercby  ordered  and  enacted,  that 
henceforth  the  tjme  for  the  eleccon  in  tounes  shallbe  in  the  second  weeke  of 
the  first  month,  with  the  same  poenaltje  the  former  lawe  requireth,  any  dii-ec- 
tion  in  the  former  lawe  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Whereas  the  way  of  the  passing  of  howses  and  lands  by  sale  in  England  No  sale  allow- 

.  ..  ,,  ,-,        able  w't-out  a 

is  both  peaceable  and  efFectuall,  namely,  by  deed,  m  writing,  sealed,  and  de-  ieedinwrit- 
liuered  with  liueiy  and  seizin,  or  possession  given  of  the  same  before  wittnes,  ">S'  *"• 
or  by  deed  acknowledged  and  enrolled,  or  by  sueing  a  fine,  and  that  diuerse 
within  this  jurisdiccon  are  apt  to  rest  vppon  a  verball  bargajne,  or  sale,  for 
howses  or  lands  of  any  valew,  this  Courte,  taking  this  thing  into  serious  con- 
sideratjon,  doth  heereby  declare  and  order,  for  the  preventjon  of  all  clandes- 
tine and  vncertajne  sales  and  titles,  that  henceforth  no  sale  or  ahenation  of 
howses  or  lands  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon  shallbe  holden  good  in  lawe,  except  the 
same  be  donne  by  deede,  in  writing,  vnder  hand  and  seale,  and  deliiiered  and 
possession  given  vppon  parte  in  the  name  of  the  whole  by  the  vender  or  his 
atturny,  so  authorized,  vnder  hand  and  seale,  &  vnlesse  the  sajd  deed  be 
acknowledged  according  to  lawe,  and  recorded. 

Whereas  many  merchants  and  seafaring  men,  with  other  straungers  that 


102 


THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


1G52. 

19  October. 
Two  magis"  & 
recorder  to  al- 
low of  wills  & 
graunt  admin- 
is  tracons. 


[*96.] 


4  Courts  in  y« 
county  of  Mid- 
lesex  annual- 
ly, &c. 


Indeans  title 
to  lands,  &C. 


frequently  resort  to  the  coixntje  of  SufFolke,  often  tjmes  by  their  deaths 
leaving  their  estates  vndisposed  of,  and  very  difficult  to  preserve  in  the  juter- 
ims  from  one  Countje  Courte  to  another,  by  reason  of  the  distan'ce  thereof 
their  estates  is  much  hazarded  to  be  lost  and  imbezelled,  itt  is  therefore  or- 
dered, that  it  shall  and  may  be  lawfull  for  any  two  magistrates,  with  the 
recorder  of  the  countje,  meeting  together,  to  allowe  of  any  will  of  any 
deceased  partje  to  the  executo"  or  other  persons  in  the  will  mentjoned,  so 
as  the  will  be  testified  on  the  oath  of  two  or  more  wittnesses  ;  and  also  graunt 
administrations  to  the  estate  of  any  person  that  shall  dye  intestate  within  the 
sajd  countje,  to  the  next  *of  kiniie,  or  to  such  as  shall  be  able  to  secure  the 
same  for  the  next  of  kinnc  ;  and  the  recorder  or  clarke  of  the  Courte  is  to 
informe  the  rest  of  the  magistrates  of  the  countje,  at  the  next  Countje  Courte, 
of  such  will  prooved  or  administracon  graunted,  and  recorde  them,  any  lawe, 
custome,  or  vsage  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Vppon  information  of  soundry  inconveniencjes  arising  in  the  coiintye  of 
Midlesex  by  the  long  distance  betwixt  the  Courts  there  holden,  and  that  the 
buisnes  of  Courts  there  is  much  increased,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and 
the  authoritje  thereof,  that  henceforth  there  shall  be  tM-o  Courts  more  there 
liolden  in  a  yeere,  viz.,  one  vppon  the  third  day  in  the  third  weeke  of  the 
foAverth  month,  and  the  other  vppon  the  third  day  of  the  first  weeke  in  the 
eleventh  month,  both  these  Coiu'tcs  to  be  kept  at  Charles  Toune. 

Forasmuch  as  there  hath  bene  a  quiestion  in  this  Court  about  the  Indjans 
title  of  lands,  this  Coiute,  taking  it  into  consideratjon,  and  willing  that  there 
may  be  a  free  passage  of  justice  for  their  right  amongst  vs,  aswell  as  for  the 
English,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  and  enacted  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje 
thereof,  that  what  lands  any  of  the  Indeans  within  this  jmisdiccon  have  by 
possession  or  improovement,  by  subdouing  of  the  same,  they  have  just  right 
therevnto,  according  to  that  in  Geunesis,  1  and  28,  chapt  9 :  1,  and  Psalmes 
115:  16.  And  for  the  further  encouragement  of  the  hopefuU  worke  amongst 
them,  for  the  civillizing  and  helping  them  forward  to  Christianitje,  if  any  of 
the  Indeans  shallbe  brought  to  civillitje,  and  shall  come  amongst  the  English 
to  inhabit  in  any  of  their  plantacons,  and  shall  there  live  civilly  and  orderly, 
that  such  Indeans  shall  have  alotment  amongst  the  English,  according  to  the 
custome  of  the  English  in  the  like  case.  Further,  it  is  ordered,  that  if,  vppon 
good  experience,  there  shall  be  a  competent  noumber  of  the  Indeans  brought 
on  to  civillitje,  so  as  to  be  capable  of  a  touneshipp,  vpon  theu'e  request  to  the 
Gennerall  Courte,  they  shall  have  graunt  of  lands  vndisposed  of  for  a  plan- 
tacon,  as  the  English  haue.  And  further,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that 
if  any  plantation  or  person  of  the  English  shall  offer  jnjiuiously  to  put  any  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  103 

the  Indeans    from  theii-e  plantjng   grounds   or  fishing    places,  vppon  theire      1652. 
complajnt  and  proofe  thereof,  they  shall  haue  releife  in  any  of  the  Courts  of    ^~     ''    "^ 
justice    amongst  the  English,  as  the  English  haue.      And  further,  it  is  or- 
dered by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  and  bee  it  hereby  enacted, 
that  all  the  tract  of  land  within  this  jurisdiccon,  Avhether  already  graunted  to 
any  English  plantacons  or  persons,  or  to  be  graunted,  by  this  Courte,  (not 
being  vnder  quallifHcation  *of  right  to  the  Indeans,)  is,  and  shallbe,  accompted       [*97.] 
the  just  right  of  such  English  as  already  haue,  or  heereafter  shall  haue,  graunt 
of  lauds  from  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof  from  that  of  Gennesis  1 : 
28,  and  the  invitacon  of  the  Indeans. 

As  an  adition  to  the  late  lawe  about  the  counstables  watches  in  the  Addition  of 
seuerall  tounes  of  this  jurisdiccbn,  itt  is  heereby  ordered,  and  be  it  enacted  by  cou'nitablcs! 
the  authoritje  of  this  Coiu-te,  that  all  the  inhabitants  of  this  jurisdiccbn  shall 
henceforth,  according  as  they  are  warned  to  serve  the  countrje  in  the  counsta- 
bles watches,  duely  and  strictly  observe  the  charge  given  by  the  counstables ; 
and  the  counstable  in  euery  toune  from  tjme  to  tjme  are  heereby  enjoyned  to 
give  in  theire  charge  to  all  watchmen,  that  they  duely  examine  all  night 
walkers  after  tenne  of  the  clocke  in  the  night,  vnlesse  they  be  knoune  peace- 
able inhabitants,  to  enquire  whether  they  are  going,  and  what  theire  buisenes 
is,  and  in  case  of  not  giving  ratjonall  sattisfaccon  to  the  watchmen  or  counsta- 
ble, then  the  counstable  forthwith  to  secure  them  till  the  morning,  and  then 
the  counstable  to  carry  such  pson  or  psons  before  the  next  magistrate  or 
comissioner,  or  three  men,  (who  shall  have  power  as  the  coiiiissioners  have,) 
to  give  sattisfaccon  for  theire  being  abroad  at  that  tjme  of  night,  and  if  the 
sajd  watchmen  shall  finde  any  inhabitant  or  straunger,  after  tenne  of  the  clocke 
at  night,  behaving  themselves  any  way  deboist,  or  that  giveth  not  a  reasonable 
ground  to  the  coimstable  or  watchmen,  or  shallbe  in  drincke,  to  secui-e  them 
by  coinittment  or  otherwise,  or  till  the  lawe  be  sattisfied;  and  further,  the 
counstable  is  to  give  the  watchmen  in  charge  to  see  all  nojses  in  the  streetes 
still,  and  lights  put  out,  (excejjt  vppon  necessarje  occations,)  that  fiers,  as 
much  as  maybe,  be  prevented,  any  lawe,  custome,  or  vsage  to  the  contrary 
notwithstanding. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  henceforth  Three  men  in 
it  shallbe  lawfull  for  any  of  the  three  coiiiissioners  appointed  to  end  smale  oathes  in  civil! 
cawses  in  the  seuerall  tounes,  vppon  the  request  of  any  person  or  persons,  to  '^^^^' 
give  oath  to  any  witnes  or  wittnesses  or  others  in  any  civil  case,  as  any  magis- 
trate may  doe ;  and  euery  such  oath,  so  taken  as  aforesajd,  shall  be  accoumpted 
authenticall  in  lawe. 

Whereas  the  coiiion  highwajes  betwixt  Andever  and  Ipswich,  Andeuer 


104 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1G52. 


19  October. 

County  high- 
wajes  from  An- 
devor,  &c. 


[*98.] 


M'  Clarke  in- 
vention. 


To  prevent 
frauds  in  mon- 
jes. 

Ten  shillings 
for  entrje  of 
accons  above 
40- ;  &  3'  41 
for  all  other. 

[*99.] 


and  Rowley,  and  Andeuer  and  Newbery  are  not  yett  lajde  out,  by  reason 
whereof  passengers  doe  suffer  great  prejudice  and  inconvenjence,  and  the 
wajes  vncapable  of  being*  mended,  becawse  vnknoune  where  they  will  be  lajd 
forth,  it  is  therefore  heereby  ordered,  that  euery  of  the  aforesajd  tounes  shall, 
w^'in  one  moneth  after  the  end  of  this  sessions,  nominate  and  appointc  one  or 
two  of  their  respective  inhabitants,  who  are  heereby  authorised  and  appointed,  to 
lay  out  the  aforesajde  highwajes  betwixt  the  tounes  before  mentioned,  and  to 
make  *retoui'ne  thereof  to  the  next  Court  of  Electjon.  And  itt  is  further 
ordered,  that  the  inhabitants  of  Andevor  shall  give  notice  to  the  inhabitants  or 
prudentjall  men  of  the  other  tounes  of  the  tjme  and  place  of  their  meeting, 
for  the  end  aforesajd,  in  wrighting ;  and  if  any  toune  or  tounes  shall  neglect 
to  doe  what  this  order  enjoynes  them,  they  shall  forfeite  the  some  of  five 
pounds  to  the  coiuon  treasury ;  and  if  any  person,  chosen  and  appointed  by 
any  toune,  shall  neglect  his  duty  heerein  enjoyned,  he  shall  forfeite  the  soiue 
of  forty  shillings ;  provided,  if  any  of  the  aforesajd  tounes  shall  send  two  of 
theire  inhabitants,  yet  they  shall  have  but  one  vote  in  the  deciding  of  any 
difference  or  controuersje  that  may  arise  in  the  laying  forth  or  determining  all 
or  any  of  the  aforesajd  highwajes.  And  it  is  ordered,  that  if  all  fower  cannot 
agree  in  any  particular,  then  any  three  agreeing  shall  determine  the  same. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  no  person  shall,  for  the  space  of  tliree 
yeeres  next  ensuing,  make  vse  of  M'^  John  Clarks  invention  for  saving  of  fire- 
wood and  warming  of  roomes  with  little  cost  and  charges,  by  which  meanes 
great  bennefitt  is  like  to  be  to  the  countrje,  especially  to  theise  populous 
places ;  and  if  any  family  or  other  person  doe,  by  the  consent  and  direction 
of  the  sajd  M'  John  Clai-ke,  or  w^'out,  improove  or  vse  the  sajd  experiment, 
they  shall  pay  tenn  shillings  to  the  sajd  M'^  Clarke,  for  which  the  sajd  ^M"^ 
Clarke  may  sue  or  jmplead  any  person  before  any  comissioner  for  the  same,  as 
the  cawse  shall  require. 

For  the  prevention  of  washing  or  clipping  of  all  such  peices  of  mony  as 
shall  be  cojned  w"^in  this  jurisdiction,  it  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the 
authoritje  thereof,  that  henceforth  all  peices  of  mony  cojned  as  aforesajd  shall 
have  a  double  ring  on  either  side,  with  this  inscription,  Massachusetts,  and  a 
tree  in  the  center  on  the  one  side,  and  New  England  and  the  yeere  of  our 
Lord  on  the  other  side,  according  to  this  draught  heere  in  the  margent. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  all  actjons 
trjable  before  the  coiiiissioners  of  the  toune  of  Boston,  which  shall-  amount  to 
above  forty  shillings,  shallbe  Ijable  to  pay  for  the  entry  tenne  shillings  for 
euery  action  so  entred,  and  for  accons  *vnder  the  sajd  valew  the  soiiie  of  three 
shillings  fower  pence  shall  apertajne  to  y'^  sd  coiiiissioners,  for  the  defraying 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  105 

of  theire  charges ;  and  also  y'  It  shallbe  lawful!  for  any  one  magistrate   and      1  G  5  2. 
the   three  comission"  appointed    to   end   smale  cawses  in  touues   to   require    ""      ^"^    "^ 
three  shillings  &  fewer  pence   for  the   entry  of  all  accous   proppcr  to  their 
cognizance,  any  lawe  or  custonie  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

^'ppon  information    of   soundry  abuses  which  may  arise,  and  thereby  To  prevent 
reproach  redound  to  the  countrje,  by  packeing  vp  beife,  porlce,  and  other  things  ij,g  bdte^*°  " 
in  caske  that  is  not  full  gage,  although  the  packer  doe  carefully  fill  the  same,  V^rke,  &s. 
as  the  lawe  provides,  it  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  henceforth 
euery  packer  shall  see  that  all  caskc  he  packs  any  bcife,  porkc,  mackerill,  fish, 
or  any  other  goods  in,  coiiiitted  to  his  care,  be  of  true  and  full  asize  and  gage, 
and  that  he  packes  the  same  in  no  other  caske  whatsoeuer,  on  poenaltje  of  tenn 
sliillings  for  euery  caske  by  him  packed  that  is  or  shallbe  defective  in  that 
respect,  one  halfe  to  the  informer,  and  the  other  halfe  to  the  countrje.     This 
order  to  be  the  next  day  published,  and  posted  vp  in  Boston  and  Charles 
Toune,  and,  by  the  first  opportunitje,  in  Salem  and  Ipswich. 

The  oath  for  packers  of  beife,  &d. 

Whereas  you,  A  B,  are  chosen  a  packer  of  beife,  porke,  and  other  things  Packers  oath, 
for  the  toune  of  B:,  yow  doe  heere  swcare,  by  the  living  God,  that  yow  will 
■well  and  truely  packe  all  beife,  porke,  and  other  things,  when  yow  shallbe 
thereunto  required  ;  yow  shall  packe  no  kinde  of  goods  but  such  as  are  good  and 
sound,  nor  any  goods  in  any  caske  that  is  not  of  a  just  and  full  gage ;  yow 
shall  also  sett  your  particular  marke  vppon  all  caske  packed  by  yow ;  and  in 
all  things  propper  to  the  place  of  a  packer  yow  shall  faithfully  discharge  the 
same,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  according  to  youi-  best  judgment  &  conscjence.  So 
helpe  yow  God. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  after  publication  heereof,  any  pson  what-  Accons  pp'  to 
soeuer,  which  hath  or  shall  have  ground  of  action  against  another,  shall  have  ^oenizancc  tri- 
libertje  to  impleade  and  try  any  action  triable  in  the  Coiuissioners  Courte  of  '^^^^  before  y«» 

acording  to  y« 

Boston,  either  in  the  sajd  Courte  or  any  other  that  hath  propper  cognizance  law  print. 
thereof,  as  is  provided  in  the  printed  lawe,  page  1"',  wdiich  gives  libertje  to  y*  ^' 
plaintiflTe  to  trje  in  whither  jurisdiction  the  plaintiffe  pleascth,  where  either 
plaintiffe  or  defendant  dwelleth ;  provided,  that  the  soiiions  or  attachment  be 
served  w'^^in  the  limitts  expressed  in  theu-e  coiiiission.  Carria'^es  for 

Vppon  complaint  made  to  the  Courte  that  seuerall  great  gunnes  of  the  y'  s""  gu°ns 

^'^  '^  .  to  be  in  a  read- 

countrjes  in  Boston,  and  other  touncs  w"'in  tliis  jurisdiction,  lye  vnmounted  ines,  or  other- 
wise to  be  sur- 
and  neglected,  it  is  ordered  by  this  Courte,  that  all  touues  that  liaue  any  such  rendered. 

great  gunnes  in  theire  *tounes  vnmounted  ai-e  enjoyned  speedily  to  take  care      [*100.] 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  14 


106 


THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Prize  of  come 
to  y"  countrje 
rates. 


Senioritje  of 
captajnes,  &c. 


[*101.] 


to  provide  good  and  sufRcjent  carriages,  to  be  in  a  readjncs  before  the  next 
Court  of  Election,  or  else  to  deliuer  all  such  gunns  aforesajd  to  the  survejor 
gennerall,  to  be  disposed  of  as  this  Couit  shall  give  direction. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  tliis  Court,  that  all  sorts  of  corne  shallbe  pajd  into  the 
countrje  rate,  for  this  yeere  ensuing,  at  theise  prizes  following,  viz. :  wheate 
and  barly  at  five  shillings  p  bushell,  rye  and  pease  at  fowcr  shillings  p  bushell, 
and  ludjan  come  at  three  shillings  p  bushell,  and  all  other  things  pajd  in  to 
the  countrje  rate  to  be  vallued  according  to  the  prizes  of  all  sorts  of  corne 
above  mentioned. 

Vppon  a  motjon  made  to  this  Courte  by  some  military  officers,  for  resolu- 
tion of  a  qu8Bstion  concerning  superioritjc  of  comanders  in  this  jurisdiction,  itt 
is  ordered  and  enacted  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  hence- 
forth, according  to  the  custome  in  niillitary  discipline,  all  cajitajnes,  w"'  their 
companies,  shall  take  place  in  standing,  marching,  quartering,  and  coiiianding 
in  thehe  regiments,  as  occasion  shall  require,  in  all  respects,  according  to  their 
antiqnitje  of  being  captajne  in  that  regement,  and  no  otherwise,  and  that  no 
captajne  shallbe  capable  to  coiiiand  as  a  capt  ouer  both  a  foote  company  and  a 
troojie  of  horse  at  the  same  tjme.  And  whereas  the  toune  of  Boston,  in 
obedience  to  an  order  of  the  Gennerall  Courte,  have  divided  themselves  into 
fower  companies,  and  left  it  to  the  determination  of  this  Courte  which  captaine 
should  be  accompted  the  oldest  in  the  toune,  the  Court  doth  further  order  and 
declare  Captaine  Thomas  Savadge  shall  take  place  next  after  Major  Edward 
Gibbens,  and  that  Cajjtaine  Thomas  Clarke  shall  be  the  third.  And  whereas 
the  south  parte  of  the  toune  had  made  chojce  of  Capt  Jn°  Leueret  to  be  their 
captaine,  who  was  formerly  chosen  captaine  ouer  the  troope  of  horse  in  the 
regement  of  Sufiblke,  and  confirmed  in  that  place,  it  is  ordered,  with  relation 
to  them,  that  they  proceede  to  a  new  election,  and  that  their  captajne  take  his 
place  accordingly.  By  senioritje  of  coinission,  wee  intend  coiiiission  in  the 
same  regement,  and  to  the  same  place  of  cofnand.  For  personall  differences 
concerning  senioritje,  it  is  referred  to  be  determined  by  the  major  and  officers 
of  the  regement,  or  the  major  pte  of  them,  according  to  the  lawe  established. 

*  Whereas,  by  the  lawe,  title  INIillitary,  page  42,  sect  6,  euery  captaine, 
leiuetennant,  and  ensigne  is  to  be  allowed  at  each  County  Courte,  and  that  by 
the  late  lawe  concerning  the  militia,  made  in  the  third  moneth,  1652,  cuery 
coinission  officer,  both  of  horse  and  foote  companje,  is  to  have  coinission  from 
the  Gennerall  Coiirte,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Coixrte  and  the  authoritje  thereof, 
that  vppon  the  allowance  of  any  such  millitary  officer,  by  any  County  Courte 
aforesajd,  sucli  as  present  them  to  the  Courte  shall  take  a  certifficat  vnder  the 
hand  of  the  recorder  or  clarke  of  that  Couite,  wliich  he  shall  forthwith  deliuer 


19  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  107 

to  the  secretary  of  tlie  Geunerall  Comte,  who  shall  speedily  drawe  vp  a  ptic-  16  5  2. 
iilar  comission,  in  parchment,  fairely  written,  for  euery  such  officer,  and  deliuer 
them  to  the  eldest  sargeant  of  each  companje  when  he  comes  for  them,  and 
the  sajd  sarjeaut  shall  carry  them  to  the  gouernor,  who  shall  affijce  the  scale  Miiiitary  offic'" 
of  the  colony  therevnto,  the  sajd  sargeant  paying  five  shillings  for  each  scale,  ""^^'  '^' 
as  the  order  provides,  and  shall  carry  them  so  sealed  to  the  majo"^  gennerall, 
w'ho  shall  transmit  them  to  the  major  of  each  regiment,  to  be  by  him,  or  his 
order,  deliuered  vnto  the  captaiue  or  cheife  officer,  to  whome  the  same  doth 
belong ;  and  for  such  miiiitary  officers,  in  any  of  the  aforesajd  places,  as  were 
formerly  allowed,  and  have  no  written  coinission  to  act  by,  the  eldest  Serjeant 
of  each  company  shall  take  certifficat  from  the  recorder  of  the  Court  where 
such  officer  was  allowed,  and  deliuer  it  vnto  the  secretary  to  be  draune  vp, 
■which  shall  beare  date  from  the  tjme  of  their  allowance,  and  expedited  as 
aforesajd  ;  provided,  that  if  the  majo"'  gennerall,  or  majo"'  of  any  regiment,  be 
any  tjme  wanting,  the  Gouerno'  shall  then  deliuer  any  such  coinission  vnto  the 
officer  to  which  it  belongs,  or  such  other  officer  of  his  company  as  shall  repaire 
to  him  for  the  same,  the  secretary  being  pajd  sixe  pence  for  each  coinis- 
sion, &fi. 

The  late  order  about  swjne  is  repealed,  and  the  printed  lawe  is  hi  force  Late  lawe 

C  i\,„i-  ,.„„«„„*  about  swine 

in  that  respect.  ,  , 

•^  repealed. 

The  lawe  about  juries  is  repealed,  and  jurjes  are  in  force  againe.  Jurjes  in  tso 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Coiute  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  whereas  Cap?  p    ^  r     •  h 
W""  Gerrish  stands  chardged  w""  the  coinand  of  a  horse  and  foote  company, 
^  shall  have  a  coiiiission  to  coinand  the  horse,  and  only  have  liberty  to  excercise 
the  foote  vntill  the  company  shall  otherwise  provide,  and  present  another  to 
take  cheife  coinand  thereof,  as  a  toune  company. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Major  Daniell  Dennison  shall  supply  the  place  of       [*102.] 

major  gennerall,  in  the  absence  of  Major  Gennerall  Sedjuke,  or  till  the  next  Major  Denni- 
son to  supply 
eleccbn ;  and   that  Captaine  Humphry  Atherton  shall   supply  the   place   of  y  pUce  of  ma- 
major,  for  the  county  of  SuiFolke,  in  the  absence  of  Major  Edward  Gibbens,  ^tifej"on' of ^ 
or  till  a  new  eleccon  ;  that  Capt  Frauncis  Norton  shall  supply  the  place  of  "•''J'"^  f°''  ^"''■■ 

folke,  &  Capt. 

major,  for  the  county  of  Mid]esex,  in  the  absence  of  Major  Rob'  Sedjuke,  or  Norton  of  ma- 

.  jor  for  Midle- 

tiU  a  new  election.  sex. 

This  Court  having  given  libertje  to  the  seuerall  troopers  of  horse  in  this  Officers  of  the 
jurisdiccttn  to  compleate  their  officers,  which  accordingly  the  troope  of  SufFolke  j„  suffolke. 
hath  donne,  and  made  chojce  of  Capt  Jn°  Leuerett  for  their  captajne,  M'  W"" 
Davis  for  their  leiftennant,  jM''  Peeter  Oliuer  for  their  cornet,  &  Jn"  Smith, 
of  Dorchester,   for  their  quartermaster  —  all  which  this  Coiute  doth  alowe 
and  confirme. 


19  October. 
Douer  & 


108  THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  G  5  2.  "Whereas  vppon  the  submission  of  the  inhabitants  vppon  the  Rluer  of 

Pascataquake  to  this  jurisdiccon,  this  Court  did  graunt  them,  amongst  other 
priviledges,  libertje  to  send  two  depu'^  from  the  sajd  riuer,  and  whereas  the 
Strawberry       freemen  of  Douer  are  increased  to  that  noumber  that  by  another  lawe  they 

Banckc  to  send  .  •     r~i  ^  •     r-^ 

3  deputjes,  &c.  have  libertje  to  send  two  deputjes  to  this  Courte,  this  Courte  doth  heereby 

order  and  declare,  that  the  sajd  touue  of  Douer  shall  henceforth  enjoy  theire 

libertje  to  send  two  deputjes,  according  to  lawe,  and  that  Strawberry  Bancke 

shall  have  libertje  to  send  one,  according  to  former  agreement. 

J  barrell  of  The  toune  of  Salem,  being  debtor  to  the  countrje  for  seuerall  barrels  of 

to  Salem  ""^    pouder,  at  the  request  of  theire  depu'",  the  Courte  graunts  them  halfe  of  one  of 

those  barrells  towards  what  they  have  expended  in  saluting  of  shipps  &  other- 

•wise,  vppon  necessary  occasions. 

CoiniBsions  to  The   Gennerall   Com-t   of  the   Massachusetts,  to  J:  L:,   Captaine,   &^  : 

troope  of  hers   Whereas  you  are  chosen  and  allowed,  by  the  authoritje  of  this  comon-wealth, 

from  capt.  to     jq  |jg  captaine  of  a  troope  of  horse  for  the  countje  of  SufFolke,  theise  are 

quarter  m'st',  "^ 

&c.  therefore  to  will  and  require  yow  to  take  care  and  chardge  of  the  sajd  troope 

of  horse  as  their  captajne,  and  dilligently  to  intend  the  service  thereof,  and  to 
excercise  your  inferior  officers  and  souldiers,  both  in  peace  and  warre,  accord- 
ing to  lawe,  coiiianding  them  to  obey  yow  as  their  captajne,  for  the  service  of 
this  comonwealth,  and  yow  to  observe  and  obey  all  such  orders  and  directions 
as  from  tjme  to  tjme  yow  shall  receive  from  your  major  gennerall,  or  other 
superior  officers,  or  authoritje  of  tliis  coiiionwealth,  according  to  lawe.  (The 
like  coinissions  the  Court  graunts  to  leiftenn'%  cornets,  &  quarterm'"^  y'^  names 
only  altered.) 

County  courts  Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  County  Court  at  Boston  shall  be  adjourned  to  the 

a  joummen  .    gijj^t;ggjjt]^  ^^j  ^f  Nouember  next. 

[*103.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  seuerall  churches  of  this  jurisdiccon  shall  observe 

Day  of  humiili-  and  kecfjc  the  tenth  day  of  Nouember  next  as  a  solemne  day  of  humilliation, 

ation,  10 ;  9  mo, 

52.  to  humble  themselves  and  seeke  the  face  of  God  ffor  these  cawses  ffollowing. 

In  regard  to  oiu-selves :  First,  for  that  his  hand  hath  gonn  out  against  vs,  in 
taking  away  many  persons,  both  menn  and  weomen  &  children,  by  an  vnwonted 
disease ;  2'^,  for  his  seeming  to  frouue  vjjpon  vs  by  vnvsuall  stormes  &  con- 
tjnewed  rajnes,  breaking  diuerse  vessells  and  throning  doune  soundiy  bowses 
and  barnes  in  diuerse  parts  of  the  countrje,  and  what  other  harmes  wee  cannot 
yett  vnderstand  of;  3'^,  a  want  of  supply  of  meete  persons  for  publick 
service,  in  church  and  coinon-wealth ;  4'^,  in  regard  of  too  much  worldli- 
mindednes,  oppression,  and  hard-hartednes  feai;ed  to  be  amongst  vs,  and 
many  other  sinnes.  In  regard  of  England  :  1^',  the  warres  being  great 
betweene  them  and  the  Hollanders ;  2,  the  increase  of  errors  and  haeresies ; 


THE    iMASSACIIUSETT3    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  109 

3'-'',  that  God  would  be  pleased  to  give  vs  Hivor  in  the  Iiarts  of  the  Parljament,      1  ('» 5  2. 
counsell  of  state,  the  gennerall  and  army  ;  4'*',  that  the  Lord  will  vouchsafe    ^~     ^       ' 
to  make  a  supply  of  sucli  coiTioditjes  to  vs  as  wee  stand  in  needc  of. 

Captajne  Symon  Willard  &  Captajne  Edward   Johnson,  a  coiiiittee  ap-  Retoumeof 
pointed  by  the  last  Gennerall  Court  to  procure  artists  to  joyne  w""  them  to  about°th 
finde  out  the  most  northerly  part  of  IMerremacke  Riuer,  respecting  the  lyne  '""'  °^  """^ 

northerly  Ijne. 

of  our  pattent,  having  procured  Sarjeant  John  Sherman,  of  Water  Toune,  & 
Jonathan  Ince,  student  at  Harvard  CoUcdge,  as  artists,  to  goe  along  w"'  them, 
made  their  retourne  of  what  they  had  donne,  and  found,  viz.  :  John  Sherman 
and  Jonathan  Ince  on  their  oathes  say,  that  at  Aquedahtan,  the  name  of  the 
head  of  Merremack,  where  it  issues  out  of  the  lake  called  WinnaiJuscakit, 
vppon  the  first  day  of  August,  one  thousand  sixe  hundred  fifty  two,  Avee 
observed,  and  by  observation  found,  that  the  lattitude  of  the  place  was  fourty 
three  degrees  forty  minutes  and  twelve  seconds,  besides  those  minutes  which 
are  to  be  allowed  for  the  three  miles  more  north  which  runn  into  the  lake. 
In  witues  whereof,  they  have  subscribed  their  names,  this  nineteenth  day  of 
October,  one  thousand  sixe  hundred  fifty  and  two.  Juf  cor.  me,  Jn"  Endecot, 
Guber'. 

JNo    SHERSIAN, 
JONATHAN   INCE. 

The  sajd  commissioners  brought  in  their  bill  of  chardge,  which  they  ex- 
pended &  pmised  on,  &  to  those  that  went  that  journey  to  finde  out  the  most 
northerly  part  of  Merremacke,  which  was  twenty  eight  pounds  twelve  shil- 
lings and  tenn  pence,  which  the  Court  allowed,  and  ordered  that  the  psons 
concerned  should  be  sattisfied  out  of  the  rate  according  as  they  were  f)mised ; 
and  further  doth  order  the  Treasurer  to  sattisfy  to  Captajne  Willard  and  Cap- 
tajne Johnson  twenty  markes  a  peece  for  their  pajnes. 

The  Courte  liaving  pvsed  the  letter  from  the  gent  to  the  eastward,  and 
not  being  sattisfied  therein,  doe  judge  it  meete  that  our  former  challenge  to 
the  place  be  further  prosecuted,  and  there  be  coiiiissioners  sent  thither  w'^'all 
convenient  speede,  w"'  full  power  to  excercise  jiirisdictjon  amongst  them. 

*To   our    trusty  and  wellbeloved    freinds,   ISI""    Symon    Bradstreete,  1\I''      [*  104.1 
Samuell  Symons,  Cap?  Thomas  Wiggin,  IMajo'  Dauiell  Dennison,  Capt  W"     23  October. 
Hauthorne,  and  M''  Brjan  Pendelton :  Whereas  yow  are  chosen  couiissioners  by  ^^^  pisi;aq 
this  Courte  to  setle  tl.e  civil  government  amongst  the  inhabitants  of  Kittery, 
the  He  of  Slioales,  Accomenticvis,  and  so  to  the  most  northerly  extent  of  our 


couussxon. 


110  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

patent,  vow,  or  any  three  or  more  of  yovr,  are  hereby  authorised  and  required 
w"'all  convenient  speede  to  repajre  to  tliose  parts,  and  thereby  suiiion  to 
assemble  the  inhabitants  together  in  some  phice  "which  yow  shall  judge  most 
convenient,  and  to  declare  vnto  them  our  just  right  and  jurisdiccon  ouer  those 
tracts  of  land  where  they  inhabit,  requiring  their  subiection  therevnto,  assur- 
ing them  they  shall  enjoy  sequall  protection  and  priviledg  with  ourselves ; 
further,  wee  doe  hereby  give  and  graunt  vnto  yow,  any  three  or  more  of  yow, 
full  power  and  authoritje  to  suiiion  and  keepe  a  Courte  or  Courts  there  to 
heare  and  determine  all  cawses,  civill  and  crjminall,  according  to  the  power 
and  authoritje  of  our  Countje  Courts,  to  nominate  and  appointe  coiiiissioners, 
administer  oathes  to  them,  and  invest  them  w"'  such  power  as  yourselves,  or  the 
major  pte  of  yow,  shall  judge  nieete.  as  also  to  appointe  and  sweare  counstables 
and  such  other  officers  as  yow  shall  judge  needefuU  for  the  preservation  of  the 
peace,  to  confirme  and  setle  proprietjes,  to  graunt  priviledges,  proteccons,  and 
imunitjes,  and  to  setle  the  gouernmcnt  there ;  and  further  to  doe  and  act  in 
the  jJmisses,  or  any  thing  of  like  nature,  for  the  ends  aforesajd,  till  this 
Court  shall  take  further  order  therein,  as  in  your  wisdomes  and  discretions 
yow  shall  judge  most  to  conduce  to  the  glory  of  God,  the  peace  and  welfare 
of  the  people  there,  and  the  maintenance  of  our  oune  just  rights  and  interest ; 
and  wee  doe  heereby  will  and  require  all  magistrates,  coiiiissioners,  capts,  and 
all  other  officers,  civill  and  millitary,  w*''in  the  county  of  Norfolke,  and  all  the 
inhabitants  of  the  He  of  Shoales,  and  beyond  the  Riucr  of  Piscatque,  w'l'in 
the  limitts  of  our  patent,  to  be  aiding  and  assisting  to  tlieise  our  coinissioners 
as  they  shall  see  cawse  to  crave  or  require ;  and  in  confirmation  heereof 
wee  have  cawsed  the  scale  of  our  colony  to  be  heerevnto  affixed,  this  23* 
October,  1652. 

Comittee  about  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  Capt  Humphry  Atherton,  Capt  Jn°  Leueret,  Capt 

the   astle.        Frauncis  Norton,  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  and  M"'  Jn"  Johnson,  siu'vejor  gen- 

nerall,  be  a  coiiiittee  to  repaire  the  great  battery  on  the  Castle  Hand,  or  make 

a  convenient  batterje  of  it,  and  make  report  of  what  they  conceave  necessary 

for  the  vpper  worke. 
Letters  to  )•«  The  Court  ordered  two  letters  to  be  sent  to  England,  the  one  to  the 

Lord  &"enn"       I'iglit  liounorablc  the  Parljamcnt  of  the   coiTionwealth  of  England,  the  other 
Cromwell.         |o  Oliucr  Cromwell,  lord  gennerall  of  all  the  forces  of  the  coinonwealth  of 

England,  which  are  in  y°  book  of  letters. 
r*105.]  *Our  coiiiissioners  presenting  what  was  donne  at  Plimouth  at  the  meeting 

Courts  appro-    of  the  cofiiissioners  for  the  ^^nited  Colonjes,  the  Courte  doth  heereby  declare 

bacon  of  our  ^  ...  .     .  .       .  .  i     •      i 

comissioners.     their  approbacon  and  justiffication  of  theire  comission"  ni  judging  their  last 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  IH 

meeting  at  Plimouth  to  be  frustrate,  and   doe  expect  sattisfaccon  from  the      1G52. 

iiu-isdiccbn  of  Plimouth  and  Newhavcn,  and  for  time  to  come  cannot  consent  ^ 

''  •'  .  23  October. 

that  the  ordjnary  meeting  should  hold,  and  the  acts  of  the  comissioners  he  Letter  to  GoQ- 

valjd,  except   two   coinissioners   from  each   colony,  authorised  as  in  the  6"'  n'ofPUmouth. 

artickle,  doe  meete  vppon  the  day  appointed.     The  Court  ordered  a  letter  to 

be  writt  to  y'=  Gouerno''  of  Plimouth,  &6,  requiring  sattisfaccon  for  an  affront 

put  by  one  of  their  coiiiissioners  on  one  of  ours,  yv'^  letter  is  in  the  booke  of 

letters. 

Whereas  the  tjme  is  expired  of  the  Courts  graunt  of  the  customes  of  About  the  ma- 

.  .     tome  of  wines. 

wines  to  those  who  were  the  tiirmers  thereof,  that  for  the  time  to  come  it     „^  ^     , 

•>  ■'26  October. 

maybe  disposed  of  for  the  best  advantage  for  the  countrje,  it  is  ordered  and 
heereby  declared,  that  any  man  that  hatli  any  desire  to  rent  the  sajd  custome 
of  wines  for  the  tjme  to  come  may  repaii-e  to  the  H«wse  of  Dei>ii''  on  the 
morrow  morning,  by  eight  of  the  clock,  being  the  twenty  sev^enth  of  y^  instant 
October,  to  compound  for  the  same. 

The  tjme  being  expired  of  the  Courts  graunt  of  the  custome  of  wines  to 
those  who  were  the  farmers  thereof,  and  the  Court  having  publickly  declared 
that  any  man  that  had  a  desire  to  rent  the  said  customes  should  repaire  at  a 
tjme  appointed  to  the  Court  to  compound  for  the  same,  soundry  gentlemen 
appearing  had  libertjc  and  did  offer  to  the  value  of  162''  p  anil,  but  the  last 
and  most  was  one  hundred  sixty  five  pounds,  by  Capt  W™  Ilauthorne.  Itt  is 
therefore  hereby  ordered  and  graunted,  that  Capt  W""  Hauthorne  shall  enjoy 
the  bennefitt  of  the  customes  of  wines  for  the  space  of  five  yeeres  from  the  day 
of  the  date  heereof,  he  giving  in  sufficjent  seci;ritje  for  the  pajment  of  one 
hundi'ed  sixty  and  five  pounds  p  anil,  during  that  terme,  in  currant  coimtry 
pay,  to  the  Treasurer  for  the  tjme  being,  or  who  else  this  Court  shall  appointe 
to  receave  the  same  in  current  countrje  pay ;  and  the  sajd  Capt  W"  Hauthorne 
is  heereby  invested  with  full  power  to  recouer  the  sajd  customes  in  aU 
respects  as  hath  binn  graunted  to  others  in  tjme  past  in  the  like  case. 

In  ans'' to  the  peticon  of  Archibald  Henderson,  craving  a  rehearing  of  Ans'toM' 
the  cawse  betweene  him  and  Samuell  Bitfeild,  for  which  the  County  Coiut 
fined  him  twenty  five  pounds,  the  Court  readily  graunted  him  a  hearing  or 
revejw  of  his  cawse  on  the  twenty  third  of  this  instant  October,  1652,  on  which 
day,  at  the  tjme  appointed,  the  Court  heard  y*  cawse,  and,  after  the  pervsall 
of  the  evidences,  doe  judge  and  declare,  that  the  sajd  peticoner,  Archebald 
Henderson,  was  justly  fined  and  punnished  by  the  County  Courte  for  his 
swearing,  cursing,  and  drunckencs,  that  he  was  justly  fined  tenue  pounds  to 
the  countrje,  and  that  his  five  pounds  fine  to  the  counstable  was  just  also.  And 
whereas  he  was  ordered  to  pay  eight  pounds  for  his  strikeing  of  fewer  men 


112 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


[*106.] 

Comittee  to 
lay  out  y» 
Indjan  planta- 
con  at  Naticke. 


Ans'  to  Martjn 
Stcbbins  peti- 


Alice  y  Wclch- 
wonians  re- 
lease out  of 
prison. 

Capt.  "Walkers 
bill  allowed,  & 
40  allowed  to- 
wds  his  foale. 


Customers 
discharged. 


M'  Batons  debt 
Battisfied. 


Ans''  to 
Edmond  Rice 
liis  peticon, 
r50  acres. 


Ans'  to  Mary 

Woodeys 

peticon. 


■who  came  to  asist  the  connstable,  the  Courte,  findcing  that  the  evidence 
prooves  y'  three  persons  only  were  so  abused,  doe  judge  that  he  should  be 
abated  forty  shillings  in  reference  therevnto ;  and  further  declare,  that  the 
counstable  did  not  exceede  the  duty  of  his  place  in  what  he  did  to  punish  the 
peticoner  for  his  offences. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Eleazer  Lusher,  M'  Edward  Jackson,  the  sur- 
vejor  gennerall,  W"  Parks,  and  Sarjeant  Sherman,  or  any  three  of  them, 
shallbe,  and  are  hereby,  impowred  to  lay  out  meete  bounds  for  the  Indjan 
plantacon  at  Naticke,  betweene  this  and  the  next  Coui't  of  Eleccou,  making 
theire  retourne  to  the  Courte. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Martjn  Stebbins,  desiring  license  to  keepe  a 
victualing  howse  in  Boston  for  onc'yeere,  the  selectmen  of  Boston  being 
willing  thei-eto,  the  Court  graunts  his  request. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  George  Munnings,  respecting  Alice,  the  Welch- 
woman,  for  hir  releasment  from  prison,  the  Courte  doth  graunt  hir  request. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  auditor  gennerall  shall  signe  the  bill  which  Joseph 
Jewet,  steward  to  y*  Howse  of  Depu'%  have  assigned  to  to  Captaine  Walker, 
and  add  forty  shillings  thereto,  w"''  this  Courte  allowes  vnto  y"  sajd  Captaine 
Walker  towards  the  losse  of  his  foale,  he  lending  his  mare  freely  to  M""  Bel- 
Hngham  for  the  countrjos  vse. 

"N^Tiereas,  by  an  order  of  the  Gcennerall  Courte,  held  in  October,  1648,  the 
custome  of  wjnes  was  lett  to  Majo''  Sedjuke,  M'  Treasurer,  Capt  Norton,  & 
M"^  David  Yale,  and  that  the  rent  of  it,  being  one  hundred  and  twenty  pounds 
p  anil,  which  was  ordered  to  be  pajd  vnto  Capt  Richard  Davenport,  which 
he  acknowledging  to  have  receaved,  the  Court  doth  order,  that  the  bonds  of 
the  gentlemen  above  mentioned  shallbe  deliuered  vp  to  them,  and  they  are 
dischardged. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  sattisfy  M''  Benjamin  Gillum  the 
soilie  of  twelve  pounds  in  corne  jequivolent  to  mony,  and  is  in  satisfaction  for 
so  much  this  jurisdiccon  owes  to  M"^  Eaton,  of  Newhaven,  w"'  which  ISI"'  Gil- 
lum acknowledged  himself  fully  sattisfjed. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Edmond  Rice,  of  Sudbury,  the  Courte  doth 
graunt  him  fifty  acres  of  land  Ijing  about  a  mile  from  Cochitchawake  Brooke, 
twenty  acres  thereof  to  be  meadow,  if  it  be  there  to  be  had ;  and  doe  order, 
that  Capt  Sjmon  Willard  and  Lciuten"*  Goodenow  to  lay  it  out. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  jSIary  Woodey,  widdow,  craving  hir  accompt 
of  hir  late  husbands  estate  maybe  examined  &  taken,  and  a  certajne  dis- 
tribution thereof  made  to  hir  &  hir  child,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  peticoner 
make  vp  the  accompt  and  produce  the  same,  with  the  will  and  inventory. 


THE    MASSACIIUSErrS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  113 

to  the  next  Quarter  Courte  at  Boston,  who  have  power  heereln  to  determine      1652. 
the  case.  "^     '        ' 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  clarke  for  the  Howse  of  Depu*^  shall  account  j^u^t„rto 
with  the  auditor  gennerall  for  all  such  soiiics  he  hath  from  time  to  tjme  re-  »<^<^'""pt «'"'  y" 

clai-kc  of  )•» 

ceivcd  ill  reference  to  his  allowance  for  his  service,  and  that  the  auditor  shall  Dcpu»  &  signe 
signe  him  a  bill  for  the  pajment  of  what  shall  be  found  due  vnto  him  from 
the  countrje. 

*In  aus"'  to  the  jieticon  of  ^lartha  Brenton,  desiring  to  eujoy  a  boy  &:      [*1()7.] 
girle,  borne  of  English  parents,  brought  ouer  amongst  the  Irish,  as  hir  ser-  Ans' to  Martim 

Brentons 

vants,  the  Court  graunts  hir  request,  provided  the  ptjes  are  prooved  before  peticon. 
two  magis''  to  have  come  from  English  parents. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticSn  of  INIiles  Tearne  &  his  wife,  craving  the  allowance  Ans'  to  Miles 
and  confirmacon  by  this  Court  of  a  certaine  parcell  of  land  belonging  to  the  peticon. 
lieires  of  Rott  Rise,  his  wifes  former  husband,  by  them  sold,  y'  thereby  they 
might  be  enabled  to  place  out  the  children  of  the  sajd  Rofet  Rice  to  good 
trades,  the  Court  graunts  their  request,  and  confirmes  the  sale  of  the 
sajd  parcell  of  land,  to  y*  value  of  twelve  pounds,  to  the  jjurchaser,  as  is 
desired. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  church  of  Maiden,  the  Courte  doth  remitt  Ans'  to 
the  fine  formerly  imposed  on  M""  Marmaduke  IMathewes,  and  doe  further  p^yjon 
remitt  tenn  pounds  of  the  fine  lately  imposed  on  the  church  of  Maiden. 

In  ans"'  to  the  j^eticon  of  George  Bowers,  the  Courte  doth  remitt  five  Ans'  to  Georgo 
pounds  of  the  fine  imposed  on  him  by  the  last  Court.  peticon. 

The  Gennerall  Courte,  having  receaved  credible  informatjon  that  the  new  Courts  advice 
church  in  Boston  have  chosen  JM'  Powell  to  be  thcire  minister,  and  that  he  (.^^ch  at  Bos- 
hath  accepted  of  theire  chojce,  doe  judge  it  mecte,  in  respect  of  the  trust  the  *°"- 
countrje  hath  coiliitted  to  them,  lovingly  to  adise  both  the  chiu'ch  and  M' 
Powell  to  desist  from  any  further  proceeding  therein,  for  many  reasons  to  long 
to  be  inserted  heerein,  which  yett  they  shall  coiiiunicate  to  the  church  or  JNI"" 
Powell,  if  they  desire  it,  and   doubt   not  therefore   of  the   churches   and  M'' 
Powells  attending  to  this  advice,  and  the  rather  becaAvse  they  maybe  compe- 
tently furnished  with  an  able  minister,  which  as  it  is  mostly  desired,  so  will 
it  tend  most  to  the  advancement  of  Gods  glory,  and  encrease  of  peace  and 
Christjan  love,  w"^  comfort  to  themselves  and  theire  neighbo''*,  of  which  they 
will  have  no  cawse  to  repent ;  for  the  furtherance  whereof  the  Gennerall  Court 
will  not  be  wanting  in  their  endeavo"'^- 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  the  new  church  at  Boston,  the  Court  declares,  Reasons  of  y 

Courts  ^dvicfi 

they  have  not,  nor  intended,  in  theire  advice  given,  condemned  or  discouraged 
the  church  or  jNI"'  Powell  from  excercising  in  publicke,  tiU  it  please  God  to 

VOL.    IV. PAKT    I.  15 


114  THE    RECOllDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 

1G52.  provide  better  for  them;  but  our  advice  is  against  proceeding  to  establish  M' 
""  ■"■  ^  Powell  a  teaching  elder,  and  the  reasons  which  induce  vs  are  these — that 
notwithstanding  the  judgment  of  the  church  concerning  M"^  Powells  abillitjes 
and  fitnes,  j'ott  the  Courte  are  not  sattisfied  of  the  expediency  of  their  proceed- 
ing in  resjjcct  of  tliis  place  of  such  publicke  resort,  and  considering  the  humour 
of  the  tjmes  in  England,  inclining  to  discourage  learning,  against  which  wee 
have  borne  testemony  this  Courte  in  our  petitjou  to  the  Parljaraent,  which 
wee  should  contradict,  if  wee  should  approove  of  such  proceedings  amongst 
ourselves. 
George  Barber  In  ans''  to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Meadfeild,  being  not  capable  of 

at  Meadfeild"    choosing  coriiission  officers,  the  Court  doth  graunt,  y'  George  Barber,  whom 
they  have  chosen  as  eldest  Serjeant,  shall  carry  on  the  millitary  excercise  there. 
[*108.]  *In  ans'  to  the  peticbu  of  the  South  Company  of  Boston,  the  Courte,  as 

Ansr  to  y  poti-  tender  of  giving  any  discouragement  to  the  petitioners,  and  having  by  order 

tion,  &c,  of  the  _  i  .• 

South  Compa-  Confirmed  Capt  Leueret  to  comand  a  troope  of  horse,  a  place  oi  greater  lienor, 
ny  .1  OS  on.  ^^^  wherein  he  maybe  more  serviceable  to  the  countrje,  cannot  consent  to 
their  request,  which  tends  to  oiu-  losse,  and  the  discouragement  of  a  deserving 
man,  and  doe  therefore  thinke  it  meete,  that  the  petitioners  proceed  to  a  new 
election,  and  the  Courte  willbe  ready  to  confirme  any  meete  man  they  shall 
present. 
Ans'  to  y  col-  In  ans""  to  the  petition  of  y°  prsesident  and  fellowes  of  Harvard  CoUedge, 

e  ge  peticon.    ^^^^  Court  doth  graimt  them  eight  hundred  ackres  of  land,  and  libertje  to  jm- 
ploy  such  as  they  please  to  finde  out  such  a  place  or  places  as  maybe  most 
coinodious  and  convenient  for  them,  and  to  retourne  to  this  Court  what  they 
have  donne  therein,  to  the  end  it  maybe  lajd  out  and  confirmed  ^-nto  them. 
Ar.s'  to  M'  In  ans'^  to  the  peticSn  of  M"'  Niccolas  Shapleigh,  the  Court  doth  graunt 

^ap  ejg  s  pe-  ^j^^  peticoner  free  libertje  to  come  into  any  parte  of  this  jurisdiction,  and  de- 
Dated  26  8>>«,  part  home,  w^out  any  resti-ajnt  to  his  person,  for  the  terme  of  one  yeere  ;  and 
he  shall  haue  libertje  to  sue  any  pson,  or  review  any  action  that  by  any  of  our 
Coui-ts  hath  past  against  him,  or  peticon  any  Court  for  his  releife,  provided, 
that  what  the  sajd  M''  Shapleigh  shall  recouer  of  any  pson  by  all  or  any  of 
the  meanes  aforesajd,  shall  be  liable  to  any  attachment  or  execution  which  any 
pson  shall  lay  vppon  them. 
Ans'  to  Menen  In   ans''  to   the   peticon   of  jNIenen  Cornelison,  itt  is    ordered,  that  the 

."""^ ''°°^  ^^' petitioner  shallbe  sattisfjed  by  the  administrators  of  Captaine  Howsqu  the 
whole  value  of  the  estate  put  aboard  Capt  Howsen,  prooved  by  Alexander 
Monrooes  and  Eichard  Stajnes,  according  as  it  shallbe  vallued  by  M'  James 
Garrett,  and  two  men  chosen,  the  one  by  one  pty,  and  the  other  by  the  other, 
or  any  two  of  them ;  and  if  any  of  the  parties  shall  refuse  or  neglect  to  choose 


2C  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  115 

a  man  as  aforesajd,  then  M"'  Garrett  and  the  other  shall  proceed  to  the  vallua-  16  5  2. 
tion,  and  that  there  shallbe  a  true  inventory  of  the  estate  brought  in,  vppon 
oath,  to  the  next  County  Court,  by  reason  of  many  other  debts  owing  by  Cap- 
taine  Howscn,  which  will  appciue  vppon  good  proofe ;  and  that  the  credito" 
may  haue  power  to  prosecute  by  lawe  for  recouery  of  their  debts  in  any 
County  Courte. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  INI''  John  Pinchon,  M""  Eliazer  Holioke,  and  Sarauell  M'  Jn»  Pin- 
Chapin,  coiiiissioners  for  the  toune  of  Springfeild,  shall  have  the  same  eofriission  Hoiiocke'  & 
to  act  bv  which  was  grauntod  to  M'  Henry  Smith  the  last  ycere,  and  that  they  s»">"<'^l  Cha- 

°  •'•'•'    pin  comission" 

take   this    oath,  viz. :  Wee,  John   Pinchon,   Eliazer    Hoiiocke,   and    Samuell  for  Springfeild, 

.  .  /■         1  !•   CI      •       n  -T  T       ^  1  /•!/-<  11   '^  their  oath. 

Chajim,  comissioners  lor  the  toune  or  .Sprmgreilde,  by  order  ol  the  (jennerall 
Court,  doe  heere  swcare  by  the  living  God  that  wee  will  truly  indeavor,  to 
our  best  ablUitje,  to  demeane  ourselves  in  our  places  according  to  tlic  lawes 
of  God  and  of  this  jurisdiction,  and  that  wee  will  dlspcncc  justice,  on  all  occa- 
sions propper  to  our  place  and  cognisance,  a?qually  and  impartially,  during  our 
aboade  in  this  jurisdicuon  and  continuance  of  our  comission,  as  aforesajd.  So 
helpe  vs  God,  &&. 

*In   ans''  to   the   peticon    of   seuerall  inhabitants   of  Boston,  the   Court      [*109.] 
graunts   their    peticon,  viz.,  contjniiancc    of   the    coiiiission    graunted   to   the  Ans'  to  Boston 

^  ^  peticon  for 

coiiiissioners,  and  doe  order,  that  the  freemen  shall  have  libertjc  to  make  a  rewallofcouiis- 
new  election  ycerely,  according  to  the  first  graunt,  leaving  them  to  choose  the  ^„°J)i5°J„r, 
same  coiuissioners,  or  others,  as  they  shall  please,  ffilling  vp  the  whole  noum- 
ber  of  seven. 

The  counstable  making  rctourne  of  the  ffreemens   choice   of  Capt  Jn"  21 : 8  mo,  1652. 
Eeueret,  Cap?  W-"  Ting,  Capt  Thomas  Savage,  M^  Nathaniell  Duncan,  W  ^^^f^'^'f""'" 
Edward  Ting,  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  and  IM'  Anthony  Stoddard   for   coiiiis- 
sioners, the  Court  approoved  thereof,  and  the  Gouerno'^  administered  the  oath, 
suitable  to  their  place,  to  them  accordingly. 

In  ans""   to   the    peticon    of  the   inhabitants   of  Strawberry  Bancke,  the  Ans'  to  the  pe- 
Court  seeth  not  how  they  cann  graunt  further  accomodation  to  the  petitioners  ^^^^  Bancke. 
till  Capt  Wiggins  pattent  be  scene,  which  will  be  brought  to  the  next  Court 
of  Election,  and  then  accordingly  it  may  be  suppljed ;  but  doe  graunt,  that  ISI"' 
Henry  Sherborne  and  M""  Reiuold  Fernald  be  admitted   associates,  according 
as  in  the  peticon  is  desired. 

Whereas  the  Sather  of  Capl  Jn"  Leueret,  deceased,  was  an  adventurer  Grannt  to 

,„.,.  IT.  ir-  Ti-1       Capt.  Jn"  Leu- 

w*"  the  first  into  theise  pts,  by  advancing  monyes  to  the  forwarding  ot  the  ^^^^_ 
plantacBn,  who  neuer  had  any  allowance  of  land  or  otherwise  for  the  same, 
this  Court  doth  therefore   graunt   to  Cap?  Jn"  Leueret,  his   sonne,  all  those 
smale  ilands  lying  w^'in  the  bay  betweene  AUirtons  Pointe  and  Nahant   not 
lieeretofore  graunted.  • 


116  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1652.  There  being  a  question  when  the  countrje  gave  the  youngest  child  of 

'        ■''       '    Jn°  Winthrop,  Escp,  two  hundred  pounds,  which  is  occasioned  by  the  losse  of 

26  October.  ,     .       ,     . 

Courts  "raunt    '""^  record,  itt  being  yett  m  the  remembrance  of  most  of  tlie  Courte  that  that 
of2)0iMo  Josh-  graunt  was  made  in  the  third  month,  1049,  the  imediate  Courte  after  die  de- 

ua  Winthrop  in 

May,  1G49.        coase  of  the  said  Jn°  Winthrop,  Es^,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  graunt  of  the 

Court  be  incerted  in  the  Court  reccords  accordingly  from  that  tjme. 
Courts  ans'  to  In  aus''  to  the  peticbn  of  Elizabeth  Winthrop,  the  relict  of  Adam  Win- 

throp hir  peti-   t^ii'op>  this  Court  doth  declare  and  decree,  that  Adam  Winthrop,  the  orphant, 
*""•  of  about  five  yeeres  of  age,  being  the   only  child  of  Adam  Winthrop,  the 

fFathcr,  and  grandchild  vnto  Jn°  Winthrop,  the  grandfather,  is  the  true  pro- 
prietor of  tlic  iland  called  the  Gouerno''^  Garden,  to  have  and  to  hold  to  him 
and  liis  heircs ;  that  Elizabeth  Winthrop,  second  wife  to  Adam  Winthrop, 
deceased,  shall  have  the  full  thirds  of  the  proffitts  of  the  sajd  iland  for  hir  hfe; 
that  M"  Henry  Dunster,  ]M''^  Elizabeth  Winthrop,  during  hir  widdowhood, 
M''  Edward  Riwson,  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  and  Capt  Richard  Davenport  are 
appointed  guardjans  ouer  the  sajd  Adam  Winthrop,  the  orphant,  to  take  care 
of  his  education,  and  also  of  all  his  estate,  reall  and  personall,  and  to  be 
accoumptable  for  the  same  vnto  the  sajd  Adam,  or  his  guardjan,  whom  he 
shall  choose  when  he  comes  to  the  age  of  fowerteene  yeeres ;  and  that  admiu- 
istratjon  shall  bo  requally  graunted  of  tlie  goods  and  chattells  late  of  Adam 
Winthrop,  deceased,  vnto  ISi"  Elizabeth  Wuithrop,  widdowe,  and  vnto  Adam 
Winthrop,  the  orphant. 
Ans'  to  James  In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  James  Pemberton,  the  Courte  doth  judge  that 

peticon.  ^^^  testemonjes  produced  to  proove  the  iland  mentioned  in  James  Pembertons 

peticbn  to  belong  to  him  doe  fully  proove  the  same,  and  doe  therefore  declare 
the  sajd  iland  to  be  his  propriety. 
[*110.]  *In  ans""  to  the  peticbn  of  the  inhabitants  of  Glocester,  craving  the  re- 

Ans'  to  mittment  of  a  fine  they  lay  liable  vnto  for  not  observinsr  the  lawe  for  nomina- 

Glocesters  -i       J  o 

peticon.  tion  of  magistrates  the  yeere  1650,  the  Courte  graunts  theire  request. 

Ans' to  vdddow  In  ans'  to  the  peticbn  of  Joane  Capen,  widdow,  craving  the  remittment 

pet'iOon.  °^  ^^^^   ^^^   ^^^^  ^^'^  iniposeth  for  not  prooving  hir  husbands  will,  the  Court 

graunts  hir  request,  and  orders  the  peticbii  to  proove  hir  husbands  will  at  the 
next  County  Court. 
Ans'toM'  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  Rawson  and  Jerremiah  Houchin,  crav- 

peticon.  ^^S  Some  order  to  be  made  by  this  Comt  for  the  allowance  of  the  will  of  Cap- 

tayne  Bozoone  Allen,  deceased,  that  his  estate  suffer  not,  itt  is  ordered,  and 
heereby  administracon  is  graunted  to  the  widdow  and  the  two  oiu-seers,  and 
they  to  pforme  the  imperfect  will  as  faiT  as  maybe,  and  they  ai-e  impowred  to 
act  as  executo"  and  execcutrix. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    KAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  117 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Hull,  the  Courte  doth  graunt      1  G  5  2. 
the  peticoners  liberty  to  soiiion  those  that  detajne  any  of  those  ilands  legally    '~'    ^i        ' 
graunted  to  them  to  the  next  Genneiall  Court,  -^Aho  shall  give  them  a  hearinar 
by  a  coiuittee,  whereby  theire  long  complaint  may  have  an  end  put  to  it.  petition. 

In  ans"'  to  the  petition  of  David  Sellecke,  the  Court  remitts  his  fine  for  Ans'  to  the 
taking  the  Irishman  ashoare,  so  as  when  he  is  recouered,  he  gives  bond  to  D,,vij 
send  him  out  of  this  jurisdiccon.  Sellecke. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Willjam  Parks,  of  Roxbury,  and  of  Anthony  Ans' to  Cap' 
Fisher,  of  Dedham,  and  Eleazcr  Lusher,  craving  this  Courts  confirmatjon  of  Antho.  Fisiicr 
certajne  lands  sold  to  y"  peticoners  Lusher  &  Fisher,  by  W'"  Parks  aforesajd,  P"'"'""- 
attourney  to  Samuell  Cooke,  of  Dublin,  in  Ireland,  gent,  deceased,  by  order 
&  power  by  letter  of  attourney  from  the  sajd  Cooke,  the  Court  graunts  their 
request,  allowes  of  and  confirmes  the  sale  of  the  sajd  Parks  of  y"  sajd  Cooks 
lands  in  Dedham  to  the  sajd  Lusher  &  Fisher. 

In  ans'^  to  the  peticon  of  Ambrose  Lane,  the  Courte  graunts  the  pcticoner  Ans'  to  M' 

,  -n^  r  •  •  ^   '      ^  •  ■  •  •      Lanes  peticon 

to  have  a  special!  Courte  tor  any  occasion  mentioned  in  his  petition,  except  in 
M'  Hills  case,  who  is  sviiioncd  to  the  next  County  Courte  by  him. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Cap?  Richard  Daucnport,  craving  pardon  for  his  Ans'  to  Capt. 
ofience  m  shooting  in  the  niglit,  when  Capt  Walker  came  m,  and  remittmcnt  ports  peticon. 
of  the  fine  the  law  imposeth  for  the  same,  the  Courte  graimts  his  request. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Roger  Shawc  shall  and  is  hereby  impowred  to  sue  tlie  Order  furtiicr 

to  impowor 

late  counstable  of  Hampton  for  the  pajment  of  eight  pov.nds  two  shillings  and  Roger  Shaw, 
sixepence,  or  any  other  concerned  therein,  at  the  next  Court  at  Salem,  and  is  in 
sattisfaccon  of  a  judgm'  acknowledged  by  the  sajd  Roger  Shawc,  for  y"  pajment 
of  eight  pounds  for  a  barrell  of  ponder  the  toune  had  of  the  coiintrje,  togeth- 
er Av""  so  much  as  may  defray  the  transportacbn  of  so  much  to  the  survejor 
gennerall. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Woobourne,  desiring  that  a      [*111.] 
coinittee  might  be  appointed  to  lay  out  y"  farmes  graunted  to  Jn"  Winthrop,  Coinissioncrs 

to  lay  out  M' 

Es^,  deceased,  and  to  Thomas  Dudley,  Es^,    Dep'  GoQn'',  nere  Shawshin,  itt  winthrop  & 
is  ordered,  that  Capt  Symon  Willard,  Capt  Edw:  Johnson,  Edward  Gofie,  Tho  f^^.^^^^  "^^^  • 
Danforth,  Jn°  Bridge,  Serjeant  Hale,  and  S'jant  Sherman  be  coiiiissjoners  to  lay 
out  the  farmes  as  is  desired,  and  that  it  be  donne  before  the  twenty  fowerth 
day  of  the  fowerth  mouth  next. 

In  ans""  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Hauerill,  the  Courte,  vnder-  Stephen  Kent 
standing  that  Steeven  Kent  was  fined  tenii  pounds  by  the  last  County  Courte 
at  Hampton  for  suffering  five  Indeans  to  be  druncke  in  his  howse,  and  one  of 
them  wounded,  doe  therefore  order,  that  Stephen  Kent  w"'in  one  month  shall 
pay  the  sajd  tenne  pounds  to  the  selectmen  of  Hauerill,  who  shall  therewith 


26  October. 


Exeters 
pcticon. 


118  TflE  EECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  5  2.  sattisfy  for  the  cure  of  the  Inclean  ;  and  in  case  of  his  refusall,  the  marshall 
shall  fetch  the  sajd  tenn  pounds  from  Steven  Kent,  w"'  chardge  for  his  pajnes, 
and  deliuer  it  accordingly. 

"Walter  Tibbets  A  copie  of  the  will  of  Walter  Tibbet,  of  Glocester,  deceased,  as  it  was 

testified  by  W™  Perkins  and  Robert  Tuckers  oathes,  heing  produced,  y"  origi- 
nall  being  lost  at  Ipswich,  the  Court  doth  allow  and  approove  of  the  proofe 
of  the  will,  as  on  file  it  may  appeare. 

Ans'  to  In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Exeter  ffor  a  finall  determina- 

tion of  the  case  betweene  Doner  and  Exeter  concerning  theire  bounds  about 
Lamprey  Riuer,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M""  W'"  Payne,  M'  Samuell  Winsly,  and 
INIathew  Boyce,  oi'  the  major  pte  of  them,  shall  vppon  the  place  appointc  and 
layout  the  bounds  betweene  them,  and  certify  this  Courte,  and  the  two  tonnes 
vnder  theire  hands  what  they  shall  determine. 

Doner  lyne  on  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  the  uoitherne  bounds  of  Doner  shall  extend  from  the 

y  nor  mcs  ,  ^^^^^  |.^^|j  ^^  Ncwitchewannicke  Riucr,  ^•]lpon  a  north  and  by  west  Ijne,  fowcr 
miles. 

Coinittee  to  lay  Itt  is  ordered,  that  Samuell  Winsly,  Thomas  Bradbury,  and  Robt  Pike 

"i    fir"  ^       shall  have  further  liberty,  as  a  coinittee,  to  lay  out  the  west  end  of  Hamilton 

end  of  Hamp-  .  '  ^  j  i 

ton  bounds.       bounds,  till  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

Ans'to  M'  In  ans""  to  the  petition  of  Henry  Dunster,  guardjan  to  the  children  of  jSI' 

tion^  ^^^  "^^ '  Josse  Glouer,  &  ffcofFcc  in  trust  in  the  bchalfe  of  Adam,  the  sonno  of  ]\P 
Adam  Wintlu-op,  late  of  Boston,  deceased,  desiring  a  coinittee  maybe  appoint- 
ed to  vcjw  and  examine  Avhat  y°  estates  of  Roger  and  John  Glouer  arc  in  the 
hands  of  the  sajd  Henry  Dunster,  Roger  being  slajne  before  any  di\ission  was 
made,  that  so  the  will  of  the  sajd  Roger  may  bo  justly  pformed,  the  Courte 
doth  graunt  the  petitioners  request  thus  farr  —  that  Cap?  Jn"  Leueret,  ]\I"' 
Edward  Jackson,  Capt  Frauncis  Norton,  Leiueteiint  W°'  Davies,  and  M' 
Joseph  Hills  shall  have  power  to  vejw  and  examine  the  differences,  as  is 
desired,  and  make  report  of  theire  retourne  to  the  next  County  Court  for 
Middlesex,  if  it  may  be  ready  against  the  same,  or  else  to  the  next  Court  of 
Midlesex  after  it. 
Courts  appro-  The  wholc  Courte,  by  their  gennerall  vote,  did  allow  and  approove  of 

coiTiit'tees  ac^^t    ^^^  ^■'^^^  °^  ^^^  coiiiittce  about  minting  of  money,  &  respecting  their  building 
about  minting   gf  jj-^p  j^^jj^j  hg-^vsc  at  the  coiiion  charge,  and  allowance  of  the  officers  15'^  in 

of  mony,  w^"!  is  ^  

on  file.    8  mo.,  euery  twenty  shillings  for  theire  paines,  and  ordered  the  comittee  to  continew 

1652.  .       ,     .  .11    1  1      ~ 

m  thene  power  till  the  next  eleccon. 

[*112.]  *M'' Nathaniell  Souther  is  appointed  publicke  notary  for  this  jurisdiccon, 

M'  Souther       j^  (j^g  j-oome  of  ]\I''  W™  Aspinwall,  and  tooke  the  oath  suiteable  to  the  place  in 

publick  notary. 

open  Courte. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 


119 


The  Gennerall  Com-t  thankfully  acknowledgeth  the  Treasurers  love  in 
furnishing  theire  coiiiissioners  w"'  teun  pounds,  and  exprcst  theire  resolution 
to  give  liim  full  and  due  sattisfaccon  for  the  same,  to  his  content. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,  and  W'"  Hibbins,  M''  Jn° 
(iloucr,  and  the  secretary,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  be  a  coiuittce  to  pvse 
the  lawes  that  have  past  this  Courte,  and  to  determine  which  of  them  shall 
goo  to  the  tounes,  and  also  to  give  the  Courts  sentence  in  ^I''  Ilindersons  case, 
and  deliuer  the  notarjes  bookes  to  the  present  notary,  who  is  to  give  his 
receijit  of  them  to  the  present  secretary,  who  is  dischardged  thereof. 


1G52. 

26  October. 
Tresurcrs 
love  &  thanks. 

Coiiiittce  to 
iivse  y«  lawes, 


*Att  a  Gennerall  Courte  of  Elections,  held  at  Boston,  the  IS"'  of  May,     \  0  53. 

1653.  ^ ' 

18  May. 

JN°  ENDECOTT,  Es^),  Avas    chosen  GoQno'',  &  tooke   liis  oath  accord-      [*113-] 
ingly. 
Eich  Bellingham,  Es^,  was  chosen  Depu'  Goii,  &  tooke  his  oath  accordingly. 
Thomas  Dudley,  Es^, 
M"^  Increase  Nowcll, 
TM"'  Symon  Bradstreet, 
M'  Thomas  Fljnt, 
Mr  Wm  Hibbins, 
M''  Samuell  Symonds, 
Capt  Rett  Bridges, 
Capt  Tho  Wiggin, 
M'  Jn°  Glouer, 
Capt  Daniell  Gookin, 
Major  Daniell  Dennlson, 
M''  Symon  Bradstreet, 
Capt  W""  Hauthorne, 
Jn°  Endecott,  Es^, 
Rich  Bellingham,  Es^, 
M'  Edward  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretary. 
M'  Richard  Russell  was  chosen.  Treasurer 


were  chosen  Asistants,  &  tooke  all  theire  oathes, 
excepting  IM"^  Dudley,  M'  Fljnt,  &  Cap! 
Gookin,  who  were  absent. 


&  was  chosen  Majo'  Gennerall. 
were  chosen  Coiiiissioners  for  y''  Vnited  Colonjes. 

were  chosen  as  Reserves. 


The  names  of  such  as  Avere  retourned  by  the  seuerall  tounes  to  serve  as 
Deputjes  for  this  Gennerall  Court  are  as  followeth  :  — 
Salem  :  Left  Lothrop,  M'  Jacob  Barney. 


120  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


18  May. 


1  G  5  3.  Charles  Toune  :  M'^  Richard  Russell,  Cap?  Frauncis  Norton. 

Dorchester  :  Left  Roger  Clapp,  Ensigne  Hopstill  Foster. 
Boston :  Capt  Jn"  Leueret,  Capt  Tho  Clarke. 
Roxbiuy  :  M"^  Jn°  Johnson,  M"  W"  Parkes. 
Water  Toune  :   Serj'  Jn°  Sherman.  Michael  Berstow. 
Lynne  :  M'  Thomas  Lajton. 

Cambridge :  M""  Edward  Jackson,  M''  Rich  Jackson. 
Ipswich :  M"^  Jn°  Whiple,  Jn"  Gittings. 
Newbery  :  Capt  W"  Gerrish. 
Weimouth :  Thomas  Djer. 

Hiugham  :   Capt  Joshua  Hubbard,  Ensign  Jerremiah  Houchin. 
Concord  :  Capt  Symon  Willard. 
Dedham  :  Left  Joshua  Fisher,  Frauncis  Cliickering. 
Salisbury  :  M"'  Samucll  Winsley. 
Hampton :  Roger  Shawe. 
Rowley  :  M"^  Joseph  Juett. 
Sudbury :  M'^  Edmond  Rice. 
Braintree  :  M''  Peeter  Brackett,  Steeven  Kingsly. 
Doner :  M"^  Valentjne  Hill. 
Portsmouth :  M''  Brian  Pendelton. 
Glocester :  W  W"  Steevens. 
Woobourne  :   Capt  Edw:  Johnson. 
Wenham  :  M''  Phineas  Fiske. 
Hauerill :  M'  Robt  Cleoments. 
Reading :  Willjam  Cowdrey. 
Springfeild  :  Capt  Humphry  Atherton. 
Maiden  :  M"^  Joseph  Hills. 
Meadfeild :  M"'  Ralph  Wheelocke. 
Kettery  :  M'^  Jn°  Wincoll. 
Yorke  :  M''  Edward  Rushworth. 

Capt  Humphry  Atherton  was  chosen  Speaker  this  session. 

r*114  1  *!'''-  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  for  prevention  of 

Prohibition  of  any  such  trade  as  maybe  of  dajngerous  consequence  to  oiu'selves,  as  the 
'  '  strenghening  of  persons  in  hostillitje  to  our  nation  or  ourselves,  that  from 
the  publication  heereof,  all  persons  in  our  jurisdiccbn  are  prohibitted  from 
carrying  provissions,  as  corne,  beefe,  pease,  bread,  or  porke,  &6,  into  any  of 
the  plantacbns  of  Dutch  or  French  inhabitting  in  any  of  the  parts  of  Amerrica ; 
and  in  case  any  shall  so  doe,  they  shall  pay  treble  the  value  so  traded,  vppon 


18  May. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    MEW    ENGLAND.  121 

legall  comactjon,  to  which  end  caution  shall  be  given  by  all  shipps  or  smaller  1  (]  5  3. 
vessells  that  shall  transport  any  provicSns  for  trade,  that  they  shall  not 
deliuer,  directly  or  jndirectly,  any  of  the  before  prohibbited  provicons  to  any 
of  the  persons,  or  thcire  assignes,  before  excepted ;  in  pursuance  whereof,  if 
any  person,  transporting  as  before  intended,  shall  not  give  in  cautjon  to  double 
the  valine  to  the  clarke  of  the  County  Courts,  or  the  secretary  at  Boston, 
whence  they  sajle  from,  to  assure  his  fidcllitje  to  this  order,  he  or  they  shall 
forfeite  such  vessell  and  goods,  one  fowerth  part  to  y''  informer,  the  rest  to  the 
country. 


Forasmuch  as  it  is  of  great  concernment  to  the  countrje,  that  in  all  tonnes  Tounes  power 

such  as 
to  serre 


there  should  be  meete  persons  chosen  to  the  office  of  counstable,  this  Court  refuse^ 


finding  by  experience,  and  some  complaints,  that  in  greater  tounes,  especially  '"^  ^'  <=''"°s''*- 

J-  .r    jjjgg  office. 

in  Boston,  many  who  are  meete  and  fitt  to  serve  the  countrje  in  such  offices,  by 
reason  of  the  smalenes  of  the  fines  that  tounes  have  power  to  impose  for  such 
refusall,  which  is  but  twenty  shillings,  take  encoiuagement  to  w">drawe  them- 
selves from  the  countrjes  service  in  such  resj^ects,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that 
henceforth  it  shall  be  in  the  power  of  the  toune  of  Boston  to  impose  the  fine 
of  tenn  pounds  on  euery  such  person  that  shall  refuse  to  serve  the  countrje  in 
the  office  of  a  counstable  in  y'  toune,  y'  in  his  pson  is  able  to  execute  it.  And 
the  selectmen  of  the  toune  of  Boston  are  heereby,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  im- 
powred  by  a  warrant,  signed  vnder  the  hands  of  y"  major  pte  of  the  selectmen 
for  the  tjme  being,  to  the  counstable,  who  shall  levy  the  same  by  distresse,  and 
deliuer  the  sajd  fine  to  the  sajd  selectmen,  to  be  jmprooved  for  the  toune  as  a 
toune  stocke  ;  and  all  other  tounes  have  liberty  &  authority  to  impose  the  fine 
of  five  poiuids  for  the  like  offence. 

This  Court,  taking  into  consideration  the  necessity  of  a  right  ordering  of  Ordering  of 
woole  in  this  jurisdiccbn,  in  seuerall  respects,  doth  order,  that  all  manner  '^  ^"^^  ^°°  *' 
of  persons  who  are  owners  of  sheepe,  and  shall  put  the  woole  to  sale,  shall 
and  heereby  are  enjoyned  yearely  to  wash  theire  sheepe  in  clcare  water,  not  being 
either  salt,  brackish,  or  dirty  ;  and  also  that  care  be  taken  that  they  may  not 
be  kejit  in  duty  or  sandy  ground  betwixt  the  tjme  of  washing  and  shearing. 
And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  in  making  vp  the  fleeces,  due  care  be  taken  that 
no  short  locks,  lumps  of  dirt,  or  course  tajles  be  found  wound  vp  therein,  vj^pon 
the  poenalty  of  the  forfeiture  of  twelve  pence  p  sheepe,  in  defect  of  all  or 
any  of  the  particculars  above  mcntjoned. 

Whereas  the  order  made  to  regulate  in  pointe  of  rateing  for  the  countrjes  Rating  of 
vse  provided  how  horses,  mares,  and  colts  should  be  valued,  which  at  present 
is  farrc  belowc  what  they  are  worth,  —  for  redressing  of  which,  this  Court  doth 
order,  that  henceforth  euery  mare,  horse,  or  guelding,  of  fewer  yeeres  old  or 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  16 


122  THE  RECORDS  OF    THE  COLONY  OP 

16  53.      vpwards,  shall  be  valued  in  the  countije  rate  *at  slxtecne  pounds,  and  of  three 

"       '^       ''    yeeres   old    at    tenn  pounds,   and   of  two   yeeres   old   and  vpwards   at    seuen 

^^ '      pounds,  and  of  one  yeere  old  at  three  pounds  tenn  shillings,  any  lawe  or  cus- 

tome  to  the  contrary  notwithstandinsr.     And  further,  it  is  ordered,  that  this 

Rating  of  J  o 

horses.  lawe  shall  continew  for  two  yeeres  only,  vnlesse  the  Gennerall  Courte  shall 

see  cawse  to  contjnew  or  alter  it. 
Lett  alone.  Whereas,  by  the  providence  of  God,  the  noumber  of  our  plantaoons  are 

None  to  preach  ^j-^gj.g^gg^i    diuerse  of  wHch,  especially  in  theire   beginning,  are  destitute  of 

W^out  appro-  '  '        r  .;  o  o 

bation,  &c.  persons  fitly  quallifjed  to  vndertake  the  worke  of  the  ministrje,  whereby  they 
are  necessitated  to  make  vse  of  such  hclpe  as  they  haue  to  excci-cise  and  preach 
publicquely  amongst  them,  by  occasion  whereof  persons  of  bolder  spiritts  and 
erronious  principles  may  take  advantage  to  vent  theire  errors,  to  the  infection 
of  their  hearers  and  the  disturbance  of  the  peace  of  the  countrjc,  for  the  pre- 
vention whereof,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  no  person  shall  vndertake 
any  constant  course  of  publicque  preaching  or  prophesying  w"'in  this  jmisdic- 
tion  without  the  approbation  of  the  ciders  of  the  lower  next  neighboring 
churches,  or  of  the  County  Court  to  ■\\hich  the  place  belongs.  And  if  any 
person  shall,  after  publication  of  tliis  order,  continew  such  a  practize,  the 
next  magistrate,  or  magistrates,  who  shall  be  informed  thereof,  shall  forbid 
such  person  ;  who  if  he  shall  not  forbeare,  he  shall  binde  him  ouer  to  the 
Courte  of  Asistants,  who  shall  proceed  w"'  such  person  according  to  the  merrit 
of  the  fact. 

A  double  levy.  There  having  binn  more  then  ordjnary  expenses  this  yeare,  by  reason  of 

the  troubles  and  other  needefull  and  vrgent  occasions,  so  that  the  annuall  countrje 
levy  -will  not  reach  to  satisfiction  of  our  engagements,  itt  is  therefore  ordered 
by  this  Courte,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  forthwith  issue  out  warrants  to  the 
couustables  of  the  seuerall  tounes  in  this  jurisdiccon,  requiring  them  to  signify 
to  y**  selectmen  of  each  tonne,  that  at  the  tjme  appointed  for  the  yearly  mak- 
■  ing  of  rates,  each  tounes  proportion  be  as  much  more  as  hath  binn  vsually  in 
tjme  past,  both  in  regard  of  heads  and  estates,  and  doe  therefore  order  the 
selectmen  to  act  heerein  accordingly. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  aiithoritje  thereof,  that  the  late 
levye  of  a  proportion  of  money,  according  to  the  last  countrje  rate,  shall  be 
retourned  to  the  ouners  thereof,  and  that  the  souldjers  that  are  pressed  in  the 
seuerall  tounes  are  heereby  released. 

r*116  1  *The  retourne  of  the  coiiiissioners  who,  vppon  the  coiuission  graunted  by 

tne  Gennerall  Court,  bearing  date  SS"*  of  October,  1652,  viz.,  M''  Symon  Brad- 

•        street,  M'^  Samuell  Symons,  Capt  Tho  Wiggin,  and  M'  Brjan  Pendleton,  in 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  123 

order  to  theire  comissioii,  repaired  to  those  partes.     At  tlieire  arlvall  at  Kittery, 
they  suinoncd  the  inhabitants  to  appeare  before  them  in  forme  foli :  — 

To  y"  inhabitants  of  Kittery. 

Whereas  the  Gennerall  Court,  hoklen  at  Boston  in  the  last  month,  did 
appointe  vs,  whose  names  are  heerevnder  written,  as  by  theire  cornission,  vnder 
the  seale  of  the  colonjc  of  the  Massachusetts,  doth  or  may  appeare,  by  suinons, 
to  assemble  the  inhabitants  of  this  touue  togither  in  some  place  which  wee 
should  judge  most  convenjent,  aud  to  declare  vnto  them  our  just  riglit  and 
interest  to,  and  jurisdiccon  oner,  the  tract  of  land  where  yow  inhabitt, 
requiring  theire  subjection  therevnto,  assuring  them  they  shall  enjoy 
sequall  proteccon  and  priviledgc  w"'  themselves,  this  is  therefore  to  desire 
yow,  and  in  the  name  of  the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts  to  requier  yow, 
and  euery  of  yow,  to  assemble  togither  before  vs  at  the  howse  of  Willjam 
Euerctt,  bctweenc  scuen  and  eight  of  the  clocke  in  the  morning,  the  16""  of 
this  present  Nouember,  to  the  end  aforcsajd,  and  to  settle  the  gouernment 
amongst  yow,  which  wee  hope  will  tend  to  the  glory  of  God,  and  to  the  peace 
and  welfare  of  the  whole.     Dated  15"^  Nouember,  1652,  &  signed 

SYMON   BRADSTEEET, 
SAM:    SYISIOXS, 
THOMAS   WIGGINS, 
BRJAN    PENDLETON. 

At  the  tjme  appointed  the  inhabitants  appeared,  &  a  Court  was  held. 

And  whilst  matters  were  in  debate  betweenc  the  inhabitants  and  the 
coiiiissioners,  com23lainte  was  made  against  one  Jn"  Bursly  for  vttering  threat- 
ning  words  against  the  coiiiissioners,  and  such  as  should  submitt  to  the 
gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts.  Michael  Brance  &  Charles  Frost  were 
wittnesses  against  the  sajd  Bursley.  The  sajd  Bursly,  vppon  his  exam- 
ination at  length,  in  open  Court  did  confesse  the  words,  and  vpp^n  his 
submission  was  discharged. 

After  long  agitacon  w"^  the  inhabitants  about  the  whole  buisines  in  hand, 
they  offered  to  come  vnder  the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts,  provided 
that  the  articles  and  condicons  tendered  by  themselves  might  be  recejved  as 
the  ground  thereof,  which  being  wholy  denjed  by  the  coiiiissioners,  who 
told  them  they  must  first  submitt  to  the  gouernment,  and  then  they  should 
be  ready  to  affoord  such  libertjes  aud  imunities  as  they  should  think  meete 
to  graunt ;   wherevppon  at  length  they  did  submitt,  as  foUoweth  :  — 


124 


THE    IIECOIIDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


1653. 


18  May. 


Wee,  whose  names  are  vnder  subscribed,  doe  acknowledge  ourselves  sub- 
ject to  the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts  Bay  in  New  England. 


Tho :  Withers, 
Jn"  Wiucoll, 
W"  W  C  Chadborn, 
Hugh  Gunnison, 
Tho :  S  Spencer, 
Tho:  D  Durston, 
Eobt  R  M  INIeudam, 
Eise  T  Tliomas, 
James  Emery, 
Christian  Remech, 
Niccolas  Frost, 
Kobt  (j  Weimouth, 
Humphry  Chadbourne, 
Charles  Frost, 
Abraham  f  Cunly, 
Eichard  Nason, 
Mary  B  Bayly, 
Daniell  Paule, 
Jn"  Diamont, 
Georg  Leader, 
Jn°  Symons, 


Jn°  Greene, 
Hugbert  Mattoone, 
Gowen  AVilson, 
W"  Palmer, 
Jerre:  fi  Sheires, 
Jn"  Hoord, 
Tho :  Spinny, 
Nath:  Lord, 
Joseph  Mile, 
Antipas  Mauericke, 
Niccolas  Shapleigh, 
Antho:  [J]  Emery, 
Eeignald  R  Jenkin, 
Jn"  A  White, 
Tho:  — I  Jones, 
Demis  Douning, 
Jn"  §  Andrewes, 
Daniell  Davies, 
Phillip  Babb, 
W-"  Euerett. 


[*117.] 


The  graunt  to  Kittery,  20'"  Nouember,  1653. 

Whereas  the  toune  of  Kittery  hath  acknowledged  themselves  subject  to 
the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts  Bay  in  New  England,  as  by  the  sub- 
scription vnder  theire  hands,  bearing  date  the  16""  of  this  instant,  it  doth 
afipeare,  wee,  the  comissioners  of  the  Gennerall  Couil  of  the  Massachusetts 
for  the  setling  of  gouernment  amongst  them  and  the  rest  w*in  the  bounds 
of  theire  charter  northerly  to  the  full  and  just  extent  of  theire  lyne,  haue 
thought  meete  and  actually  doe  graunt  as  followeth  :  — 

*  1''.  That  the  whole  tract  of  land  beyond  the  Eiuer  of  Piscataq.  northerly, 
together  with  the  Isle  of  Shoales,  w'^'in  our  sajd  bounds,  is  and  shallbe  hence- 
forth a  county,  or  shire,  called  by  the  name  of  Yorkeshire. 

2.  That  the  people  inhabiting  there  shall  enjoy  protcccon  fcquall  acts 
of  favor,  &  justice  yv''^  the  rest  of  the  people  inliabitting  on  the  south  side  of 
the  Eiuer  Piscataqe,  w"'in  the  Ijmitts  of  our  whole  jurisdiccon. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND  125 

3.  That  Kittery  shallbe   and    remajnc  a  toiincsliip,  «&  haue  and  enjoy      1  G  5  3. 
the  privilcdgcs  of  a  toune,  as  others  of  the  jurisdiccon  haue  and  doc  enjoy.  '        "<       ^ 

4.  That  they  shall  enjoy  the  same  bounds  that  are  clcere  bctwcenc  toune  '  '^' 
and  toune,  as  hath  binn  formerly  graunted  when  comissioners  of  each  bor- 
dering toune  hath  vejwed  and  retourned  to  vs  or  to  the  Gennerall  Court  theire 
sui-vey. 

5.  That  both  each  toune  and  euery  inhabitant  shall  haue  and  enjoy  all 
theire  just  proprietjes,  titles,  and  interests  in  the  howses  and  lands  which  they 
doe  possesse,  whither  by  graunt  of  the  toune,  or  of  the  Indeaus,  or  of  the 
former  Gennerall  Courts. 

6.  That  the  town  of  Kittery,  by  theire  freemen,  shall  send  one  dejiuty 
yeai-ely  to  the  Court  of  Election,  and  that  it  shallbe  in  theire  libertje  to  send 
to  each  Court  two  deputjes,  if  they  thinke  good. 

7.  That  all  the  present  mhabitants  of  Kittery  shall  be  freemen  of  the 
countrje,  and,  having  taken  the  oath  of  freemen,  shall  have  libertje  to  give 
theire  votes  for  the  election  of  the  Gouerno'',  Assistants,  and  other  gennerall 
officers  of  the  countrje. 

8.  That  this  county  of  Yorke  shall  haue  County  Coiu-ts  w^'in  them- 
selves, in  the  most  comodious  and  fitt  places,  as  authoritje  shall  see  meete  to 
appolnte. 

9.  That  euery  touneshipp  shall  haue  three  men,  approoved  by  the  County 
Court,  to  end  smale  cawses,  as  other  the  touneshipps  in  the  jurisdiccSn  hath, 
■where  no  magistrate  or  coinissioner  resideth. 

10.  That  the  shire  shall  or  may  haue  three  associates  to  asist  such  comis- 
sioners as  the  present  coiiiissioners  or  authoritje  of  the  Massachusetts  shall 
send,  and  such  magistrates  as  shall  voluntarilly  come  vnto  them  from  tjme 
to  tjme. 

11.  That  the  inhabitants  of  the  county  of  Yorkshire  shall  not  be  di-aune 
to  any  ordjnary  gemierall  traynings  out  of  theire  oune  county  w"'out  theire 
consent. 

12.  That  the  inhabitants  of  Kittery  shall  also  haue  &  enjoy  the  same 
priviledges  that  Douer  hath,  vppon  theire  coming  ■vnder  this  gouernment. 

13.  That  all  such  as  haue  or  shall  subsciibe  voluntarily,  as  the  rest  haue 
donne,  before  the  ending  this  Courte,  shall  haue  the  priviledge  of  indempnitje 
for  all  acts  of  power  excercised  by  the  former  gent  vntill  the  protest,  and  for 
and  in  respect  of  such  criminall  matters  as  are  breaches  of  pocnall  lawes  w"'in 
the  whole  gouernment  ;  provided,  that  Abraham  C'unly  hath  libertje  to  ap- 
peale  in  respect  of  his  case  wherein  he  was  fined  tenn  pounds,  ann"  51. 

14.  Provided  alwajes,  that  nothing  in  this   our   graunt  shall  extend  to 


126  THE    RECOllDS    OF    TPIE    COLONY    OP 

determine  the  infringing  of  any  persons  right  to  any  hind  or  inhserltauncet 
whither  by  grauut,  by  pattent,  or  otherwise,  where  possession  is  had,  but  such 
titles  shallbe  left  free  to  be  heard  and  determined  by  due  course  of  lawe. 

Provided,  and  it  is  heereby  declared,  that  nothing  in  this  graunt  shall 
extend  to  restrajne  any  civill  action,  or  revejw  for  former  civill  cawses,  which 
reveiw  shall  be  brought  to  any  of  our  Courts  w^'in  one  yeere  now  ensuing. 
And  whereas  there  are  certajne  debts  and  imposts  due  to  the  inhabitants  of 
Kitterje  and  Accomenticus,  and  some  debts  which  are  owing  from  them  to 
pticular  persons  for  publicke  occasions,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  and  agreed, 
that  ]\I''  Niccolas  Shapleigh  shall  haue  power  forthwith  to  collect  such  soiiie 
or  soiues  of  money  as  are  due  to  the  aforesajd  inhabitants,  and  pay  such  debts 
as  are  justly  dew  from  them,  and  give  an  accompt  thereof,  w"'in  one  month, 
to  the  coinissioners  that  shallbe  theu  in  present  being ;  and  if  it  shall  then 
appeare  that  there  is  not  sufficyent  to  discharge  the  peoples  engagement,  it 
shall  be  suppljed  by  way  of  rate,  according  to  the  former  custome. 

SYMON  BRADSTREET, 
THO:    WIGGIN", 
SAMUELL   SYMONDS, 
BRJAN   PENDLETON. 


[*118.]  *  Whereas  the  Gennerall  Court,  holden  in  Boston  in  October  last,  graunted 

M'  Niccolas  Shapleigh  protection  for  one  yeere  freely  to  come  into  the  jurisdic- 
cbn  of  the  Massachusetts,  and  to  retourne  to  his  oune  bowse  w"^out  molestation, 
wee,  the  coinissioners  appointed  by  the  said  Court  to  setle  the  ciuill  gouernment 
at  Kittery,  &<?,  vfipon  the  request  of  the  sajd  M''  Shaplejgh,  haue  thought  meete, 
and  accordingly  graunted,  that  no  former  judgment  or  execution  formerly  ob- 
tejned  by  any  credito''  in  any  Court  of  the  Massachusetts  against  the  sajd  M.' 
Shapleigh  shallbe  of  force  against  his  jDcrson  for  one  yeere  from  the  date  of 
the  sajd  protection,  notw"'standing  the  jjlace  of  his  habitation  is  w"'in  the 
jurisdiccon  of  the  Massachusetts  aforesajd ;  provided,  neuerthelesse,  that  this 
priviledge  and  protection  now  graunted  shall  not  barr  or  lett  any  person 
w'soeuer  from  suing  or  recouering  by  lawe  any  debt  due  by  bond,  bill,  or 
otherwise  from  the  said  M''  Shapleigh  vi^pon  a  new  accon,  either  in  the  County 
Court  of  Yorke  or  Kittery,  or  w"'in  the  jurisdicCbn  where  any  such  credito"' 
may  inhabitt,  his  person  still  to  be  free  from  restrajnt  for  y"  terme  aforesajd. 
Given  at  Kittery,  vnder  our  hands,  this  2-1"'  Nouember,  1652. 
Constables  of  Thomas    Dunston  and  Robert  Mcndam  were  chosen  and  sworne  coun- 

stables  for  the  tounc  of  Kittery. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  127 

riiillip  Babb,  of   Hogg   Hand,  was    appointed  &  aiiUioiized  comistable      1  fi  5  3. 
for  all  the  Hand  of  Shoales,  Starr  Hand  excepted.  "" 

18  May. 

M'  Hugh  Gunnison  was  licensed  to  keepe  an  ordjnary,  and  to  sell  wjne  constables  of 
and  strong  water ;  and  for  one  yecre  he  is  to  pay  but  twenty  shillings  the  i'"=  °f  shoales. 
butt. 

Whereas  the  Gennerall  Court,  holdcn  at  Boston  in  October  last,  hath 
appointed  and  authorized  vs,  whose  names  ai'e  vnderwrittcn,  to  sctle  the  ciuill 
gouerument  in  this  place  of  Kitteiy,  now  in  the  county  of  Yorkshire,  as  by 
theire  coinission,  vudcr  the  scale  of  this  colonjc,  dat  28  of  October,  doth  or 
may  appeare,  wee,  therofoi-e,  the  sajd  coiliissioners,  w"'  the  free  and  full  con- 
sent of  the  inhabitants  of  Kittery,  have  and  hcereby  doe  constitute  and 
appointe  the  right  trusty  JNI''  Brjan  Fendletou,  M'  Thomas  Withers,  coinis- 
sioners,  and  M""  Hugh  Gunnison  as  an  associate,  and  invested  them  w*  full 
power  and  authoritje,  togither  w"'  one  Asistant  of  the  goQnment  of  the 
Massachusetts,  to  keepe  one  County  Court  at  Kittery ;  and  euery  one  of  these 
coinissioners  hereby  have  magistratticall  power  &  authority  to  heare  and  deter- 
mine smale  cawses,  like  as  other  magistrates  that  arc  Asistants  haue,  whither 
they  are  of  a  ciuill  or  criminall  nature ;  also  power  is  hcereby  giueu  to  the 
sajd  comissioners  and  associate  assembling  togither  betweene  the  County 
Courts,  to  heare  and  determine,  w"'out  a  jury,  in  the  sajd  toune  any  cawse 
not  exceeding  tenn  pounds.  Any  of  the  coinissioners  may  graunt  suiiions  or 
attachments,  and  execcution,  if  ncede  requier.  .  Any  of  the  sajd  coinissioners 
heereby  haue  power  to  examine  offenders,  to  coiiiitt  to  prison,  vnlesse  bajle  be 
given  and  taken.  Also  each  of  thcise  coinissioners  haue  heereby  power,  when 
they  shall  judge  needefuU,  to  binde  offenders  to  the  peace  or  good  behaviour ; 
also  each  of  these  coinissioners  haue  heereby  power  to  administer  oathes,  ac- 
cording to  lawe ;  also  marriage  shall  be  solemnized  by  any  of  the  coiliissioners, 
according  to  lawe ;  also  the  County  Court  shall  appointe  a  shire  treasurer,  to 
whom  fines  and  matters  of  the  like  nature  are  to  be  accompted  and  pajd,  for 
the  vse  of  the  countrje ;  also  any  of  the  sajd  coiliissioners  may  administer  the 
oath  to  such  of  the  present  inhabitants  as  shall  desier  to  be  made  free ;  also 
two  of  these  coiliissioners  may,  till  other  order  be  taken,  graunt  or  renew 
licenses  for  ordinarjes,  or  selling  wine  or  strong  water ;  also  two  of  the  sajd 
coiliissioners  heereby  haue  authoritje  to  impower  millitary  officers  vnder  the 
degree  of  a  captajne ;  also  power  is  heereby  given  to  two  of  the  sajd  coinis- 
sioners, and  they  are  reciuircd  to  cnjoyne  *the  toune  of  Kittery  to  procure  [*119.] 
the  bookes  of  lawes,  and  such  also  as  are  not  as  yett  printed  &  enacted  since  the 
last  bookc  came  forth  in  print;  and  it  is  intended  that  both  grand  juijcs  and 


128  THE  EEC0RD3  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


18  May. 


1G5  3.  ji""jes  for  trjalls  shallbe  suinoned  for  the  County  Coiut  out  of  Yorke  & 
Kittery  proportionably.  Given  vnder  our  hands,  at  Kittery,  this  20"'  of  No- 
uemberj  1652. 

SYMON  BRADSTREET, 
THO:  WIGGIN, 
SAMUELL  SYMONS, 
BRJAN  RENDLETON. 

The  retourne  of  the  comissioners  who,  vppon  the  comission  graunted  by 
the  Gennerall  Courte,  bearing  date  28  of  October,  1652,  viz.,  M''  Symon 
Bradstreet,  JNl"'  Sainucll  Symonds,  Capt  Thomas  Wiggin,  and  M"^  Brjan  Pen- 
dleton, in  order  to  theire  coiiiission,  after  they  had  binn  at  Kittery,  repaired 
to  Accomenticus,  or  Gorgeana,  and  suinoned  the  inhabitants  thereof  to  appeare 
before  them. 

"Whereas  the  Gennerall  Court  holdeu  at  Boston  in  the  last  month  did 
appoint  vs  whose  names  are  heerevuder  written,  as  by  theire  coinission  vnder 
the  seale  of  the  colony  of  the  Massachusetts  doth  or  may  appeare,  by  suiiions 
to  assemble  the  inhabitants  of  this  toune  together,  in  some  place  which  wee 
should  judge  most  convenjent,  and  to  declare  vnto  them  our  just  right  and 
interest  to,  and  jurisdiccon  ouer,  the  tAct  of  land  where  you  inhabitt,  requir- 
ing theire  subjection  therevnto,  assuring  them  they  shall  enjoy  ajquall  protec- 
con  and  priviledge  w"'  themselves, — this  is  therefore  to  desire  yow,  and  in  the 
name  of  the  gouernment  of  the  INlassachusetts  to  require  yow,  and  euery  of 
yow,  to  assemble  together  before  vs  at  the  howse  of  Niccolas  Davis,  betweene 
seven  and  eight  of  the  clocke,  on  Monday  next,  in  the  forenooue,  to  y'  end 
aforesajd,  and  to  setle  the  gouernment  amongst  yow,  which  wee  hope  will  tend 
to  the  glory  of  God,  and  to  the  peace  and  welfare  of  the  whole.  Dat  20*  day 
of  Nouember,  1652.     Subscribed, 

SYMON   BRADSTREET, 
SAMUELL   SYMONDS, 
TIIO:    WIGGIN, 
BRJAN   PENDLETON. 

And  was  directed  to  M"^  Niccolas  Davis  and  M""  Jn"  Davis,  who  were  required 
and  authorized  to  warne  the  inhabitants  abovesajd. 

Vppon  the  22"'  of  Nouember,  1652,  the  coinissioners  held  theire  Courtj 
and  the  inhabitants  appeared,  and  after  some  tjme  spent  in  debatements,  and 


THP:    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 


129 


many  queestions  answered  and  objections  remooved,  w"'  a  full  and  joinct  con- 
sent acknowledged  themselves  subject  to  the  gouernment  of  the  Massachu- 
setts in  New  England ;  only  M'  Godfry  did  forbeare  vntlU  the  vote  was  past 
by  the  rest,  and  then  iiTiediatcly  he  did,  by  word  and  vote,  expresse  his  con- 
sent also.     The  names  of  tliose  that  tooke  the  oath  of  freemen  were,  — 


1653. 


18  May. 


M"'  Edward  Godfrey, 
Tho  Crocket, 
Jn"  Alcocke, 
W""  Dixon, 
Rice:  Codogan, 
George  Parker, 
Andrew  Euered, 
Eobt  Kjiight, 
W"  Eogers, 
Sam  Alcocke, 
Joseph  Alcoke, 
Peter  Wjer, 
Phihp  Adams, 
M''  Prauncls  Eaines, 

^       Lewis, 
Robt  Edge, 
Phillip  Hatch, 
Jn°  Davis, 
Niccolas  Bond, 
M'  Edward  Johnson, 
Hugh  Gajle, 
W™  Garnesey, 
Rich:  Banckes, 
Edw:  Wentom, 
George  Brancen, 
Mary  Topp:,  acknowledged 
hirself  subject,  &(3,  only. 

The  comissloners  (soone  after)  graunted  vnto  tnem  seuerall  prluUedges 
and  libertjes,  subscribed  vnder  theire  hands,  the  same  which  they  graunted  to 
the  inhabitants  of  Klttery,  w""  these  additions,  viz. :  — 

Further,  wee,  the  comissloners  aforesajd,  doe  consent  and  agree  that  the 
totine  now  called  Accomenticus  shall  henceforth  be  called  Yorke. 

3.  *Ajid  that  one  Court  shall  be  kept  yearely  in  the  sajd  toune,  by  such 

VOL.  IV.  PART   I.  17 


M--  W™  Hilton, 

W"  Moore, 

Henry  Donell, 

Edward  Stirt, 

Rowland  Young, 

Jn"  Parker, 

Arthur  Bragdon, 

W"  Elllngham, 

Jn°  Tuisdale,  Juii, 

Tho  Courteous, 

Silvester  Stouer, 

Tho  Dennell, 

M"^  Edward  Rushworth, 

Jn°  Harker, 

Niccolas  Davis, 

Sampson  Angler, 

M'  Henry  Norton, 

Rott  Hetherse, 

W""  Freathy, 

Jn°  Davis, 

Jn"  Tuisdale,  Sen, 

M''  Abra:  Preble, 

M'^  Jn"  Gouch, 

M'  Tho  Whelewrlght. 


[*120.] 


130  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  5  3.      magistrate  or  magistrates  and  other  comissioners  as  the  Gennerall  Court  of  the 

' Y    — ■'    Massachusetts  shall  from  tjme  to  tjme  appointe,  and  for  the  present  by  such 

^^'  comissioners  as  shallbe  authorized  by  the  aforesajd  comissioners  of  the  Massa- 
chusetts, which  Court  shall  haue  the  same  power  for  trjall  of  all  cawses,  ciuill 
or  crjminall,  arising  in  the  county  of  Yorke,  as  other  County  Courts  hauc  in 
the  Massachusetts  jurisdiccon. 

4.  That  such  of  the  present  inhabitants  as  shall  take  the  oath  of  freedome 
shallbe  thenceforth  capable  of  giving  theire  voate  for  the  choise  of  Gouemo"", 
Asistants,  and  other  gennerall  officers,  and  of  being  chosen  to  any  of  the  afore- 
sajd places  of  honnor  and  trust. 

5.  Itt  is  further  agreed,  that  the  inhabitants  of  Yorke  and  Kittery  shall 
sett  out  theire  bounds  betwixt  them,  and  the  inhabitants  of  Wells  and  Yorke 
shall  sett  out  theire  bounds  betwixt  them,  w*in  one  yeare  now  next  ensuing ; 
otherwise  it  shall  be  donne  by  coinissioners  appointed  by  the  Gennerall  Court, 
and  the  head  Ijne  of  Yorke  bounds  into  the  countrje  shallbe  in  a  streight  Hue 
by  the  south  east  side  of  a  certajue  pond,  about  two  miles  into  the  countrje 
beyond  the  northerly  braunch  of  a  certaine  marish,  now  iniprooved  by  some 
of  the  inhabitants  of  Yorke,  and  so  to  the  divicbn  Ijnes  betwixt  the  tounes  be- 
fore mentioned ;  and  if  it  so  fall  out  that  any  part  of  the  marshes  now  reputed 
to  belong  to  Yorke,  and  iniprooved  by  the  inhabitants  thereof,  shall  fall  w'l'in 
Kittery  bounds,  yett  the  sajd  propriety  of  the  said  marish  shall  belong  to  the 
inhabitants  of  Yorke  to  whom  it  is  graunted ;  and  if  any  of  the  lands  or 
marishes  now  reputed  to  belong  to  Kittery,  and  improoved  by  any  of  the  in- 
habitants thereof,  shall  fall  w'Mn  the  bounds  of  Yorke,  yett  the  propriety  of 
the  sajd  lands  or  marish  shall  belong  to  such  of  the  inhabitants  of  Yorke  or 
Kittery  to  whom  it  is  graunted. 

SYMON    BRADSTREET, 
THO:   WIGGIN, 
SAMUELL   SYMONDS, 
BRJAN   PENDLETON. 

At  the  same  Court  held  at  Yorke  y«  22  of  Nouember,  1652,  M'  Nicco- 
las  Davis  was  chosen  and   sworne   counstable. 

M""  Edward  Rushworth  was  chosen  recorder,  &  desired  to  excercise  the 
place  of  dark  of  the  writt. 

M"^  Henry  Norton  was  chosen  marshall  there. 

Jn"  Davis  was  Ucensed  to  keepe  an  ordjnary. 

Then  was  the  comission  graunted  to  the  Court  of  Yorke  as  foUoweth :  — 

"Whereas  the  Gennerall  Court,  holden  at  Boston,  in  October  last,  hath 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  131 

appointed  and  authorized  vs,  whose  names  are  vndei-wrltten,  to  setle  the  ciuill      16  53. 
gouernment  ui  tliis  place,  now  called  Yorke,  in  the  county  of  Yorkshire,  as  ' 

by  theire  coinission,  vnder  the  scale  of  this  colony,  dat  28  of  the  aforesajd  y^^j^ 
October,  doth  or  may  appeai-e,  —  wee,  therefore,  the  sajd  coinissioners,  w"»  the 
free  and  full  consent  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  sajd  toune,  haue  and  doe 
heereby  constitute  and  appointe  the  right  trusty  M"'  Edward  Godfry,  M"'  Abra- 
ham Preble,  M''  Edward  Johnson,  and  M''  Edward  Rushworth  coinissioners, 
invested  w""  full  power  and  authoritje,  together  w*  one  Asistant  of  the  gouern- 
ment of  the  Massachusetts,  to  keepe  one  County  Comt  yearely  at  Yorke ;  and 
euery  of  these  coinissioners  heereby  have  niagistratticall  power  to  heare  and 
determine  smale  cawses,  like  as  other  magistrates  that  are  Asistants  haue, 
whither  they  are  of  a  ci-sdll  or  of  a  crjminall  nature.  Also  power  is  heereby 
given  to  any  three  of  the  sajd  coinissioners,  assembling  togither,  betweene  the 
County  Courts,  to  heare  and  determine,  w"'out  a  jury,  iu  the  sajd  toune,  any 
cawse  not  exceeding  tenn  pounds.  Any  of  the  coinissioners  may  graunt 
sufnons  or  attachments  and  execcution,  if  neede  require.  Any  of  the  sajd 
coinissioners  heereby  haue  power  *to  examine  offenders,  to  coiiiitt  to  the  prison,  [*121.J 
vnlesse  bajle  be  given  and  taken ;  also  each  of  these  coinissioners  haue  heere- 
by power  to  administer  oathes  according  to  lawe.  Also  any  of  the  comlssioners 
haue  heereby  power,  when  they  shall  judg  needfull,  to  bind  offenders  to  the 
peace,  or  good  behaviour.  Also  marriage  shallbe  solemnized  by  any  of  the 
coiiiissioners,  according  to  lawe.  Also  the  County  Court  shall  appoint  a  shire 
treasurer,  to  whome  fines  and  matters  of  the  like  nature  are  to  be  accompted 
and  pajd  for  the  vse  of  the  county.  Also  any  of  the  sajd  coinissioners  may 
administer  the  oath  to  such  of  the  present  inhabitants  as  shall  be  made  free. 
Also  two  of  theise  coinissioners  may,  till  other  order  be  taken,  graunt  or  re- 
new licenses  for  ordinarjes,  or  selling  wine  or  strong  waters.  Also  two  of  the  ■ 
sajd  coiiiissioners  heereby  haue  authoritje  to  impower  millitary  officers  vnder 
the  degree  of  a  captajne.  Also  power  is  heereby  giuen  to  two  of  the  sajd 
coinissioners,  and  they  are  required,  to  enjoyne  the  toune  of  Yorke  to  procure 
the  books  of  lawes,  and  such  also  as  are  not  yett  printed,  and  enacted  since 
the  last  booke  came  forth  in  print.  And  it  is  intended  that  both  grand  jurjes 
and  jurjes  for  trialls  shall  be  suiiioned  for  the  County  Court  out  of  Yorke  and 
Kittery  proporconably. 

Giuen  vnder  our  hands,  at  Yorke,  this  22"^  of  Nouember,  1652. 
Signed, 

SYMON   BRADSTREET, 
TH'^  WIGGIN, 
SAMUELL   SYMONDS, 
BRJAN   PENDLETON. 


132 


THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


Who  to  keepe 
Courts  at 
Yorke  & 
Kittery. 


Coffiission's 
Court  at  Ports- 
mouth power. 


Judgment  of 
Court  about 
Nodles  Hand. 


[*122.\ 


The  Courts 
Bence  &  desire 
of  M'  Norton 
acceptance  of 
office  in  y« 
church  of 
Boston. 


The  Court,  having  vjewed  this  retoiirne  of  the  coiuissi  jners  at  Kittery  and 
Yorke,  doe  approove  thereof,  and  orders,  that  due  &  harty  thanks  be  ren- 
dered to  them  by  this  Court  for  their  pajnes  and  service  therein,  and  shallbe 
willing  and  ready  to  make  them  further  sattisfaccon,  in  the  graunt  of  some 
land  to  each  of  them  respectively,  when  any  shall  be  presented. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Richard  Bellingham,  Es^,  w*''  Thomas  Wiggin, 
M"^  Godfry,  M'  Niccolas  Shapleigh,  and  M'  Edward  Rushworth,  shall  keepe 
the  County  Courts  at  Yorke  and  Kittery  for  this  yeere,  at  the  tjmes  appointed, 
and  that  they  send  out  warrants  to  the  inhabitants  of  Yorke  and  Kittery  forth- 
with to  proceed  to  a  faire  eleccon  and  nomination  of  three  associates  from 
amongst  themselves,  to  asist  such  magistrate  and  coinissioners  as  this  Genner- 
all  Court  shall  appointe  to  keepe  theire  County  Courts  for  the  next  yeare. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  the  Comissioners  Court  at  Portsmouth 
shall  haue  aequall  power  for  trjall  of  actions  w"'in  themselves,  to  the  value  of 
tenn  pounds,  as  Yorke  and  Kittery  haue,  which  shall  continew  till  the  Court 
shall  take  further  order;  and  the  County  Courts  of  Doner  aud  Portsmouth 
shall  annually  haue  theire  Courts  vppon  the  last  Tuesday  in  June  ;  and  the 
county  of  Yorkeshire  shall  haue  their  County  Court  the  Thirsday  ffollowing. 

In  the  case  of  Left  Jn"  Sayers,  attourney  of  Colonell  Jn"  Burch,  assignee 
of  Capt  George  Briggs,  against  M''  Samuell  Mauericke,  for  Nodles  Hand,  at 
a  speciall  Court  held  at  Boston,  28"^  December,  1652,  the  Court  not  receiving 
the  verdict  of  the  jury,  the  case,  by  course  of  law,  fell  to  the  Gennerall  Court, 
to  be  determined.  This  Court,  having  heard  and  pvsed  the  evidences  in  y"  case 
produced  by  both  partjes,  determined  the  same  by  resolution  of  a  quaestion,  viz. : 
resolved  on  the  question  in  the  case  betweene  Colonell  Jn°  Burch  &  M"'  Mauer- 
icke, that  Nodles  Hand  and  appurtenances,  in  the  same  condicon  as  is  expressed 
in  the  dcede  of  sale  to  Capt  Briggs,  doth  belong  vnto  Collonell  Jn°  Burch,  and 
possession  is  to  be  deliuered  vnto  him,  his  heires  or  assignes,  vppon  the  pay- 
ment of  legall  *tender  of  seuen  hundred  pounds  starling,  at  the  storehowse 
next  the  waterside,  at  the  bridge  in  Barbadoes,  in  good,  marchan table  sugar, 
at  price  current,  as  for  bills  of  exchange,  payable  in  London  iiuediately  after 
the  expiracon  of  thirty  dajes  sight  of  the  judgment  of  this  Court  in  this  case, 
and  that  there  should  be  no  charges  allowed  to  Collonell  Jn°  Burch. 

Though  this  Court  cannot  but  on  all  occasions  expresse  theire  sence  of  the 
heavy  stroake  of  God  on  the  whole  countrje,  as  well  is  on  the  toune  of  Boston, 
in  that  he  hath  seene  meete  to  deprive  them  of  so  vsefidl  an  instrument  as  ]\P 
Jn"  Cotton  was,  yett  would  not  be  wanting  to  rejoyce  in  Gods  goodnes  in 
making  vp  that  sad  breach  w**"  such  a  comfortable  supply  to  the  church  of 
Boston,  in  that  the  Reuerend  M'  3n°  Norton,  by  the  gracjous  blessing  of  God 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  133 


18  May. 


on  the  endeavo"  of  the  church  of  Boston,  with  his  oune  good  liking,  is  novr  1  6  .5  3. 
resident  amongst  them,  the  Coui-t  judgeth  it  no  more  then  necessary  that  this  *""  ^ 
Court  should,  by  the  honnored  Gouerno'',  with  the  Speaker  of  the  Deputjes, 
expresse  to  the  Reuerend  M''  Norton,  not  only  how  acceptable  it  is  to  them  that 
God  hath  mooved  his  hart  to  accept  of  the  call  of  the  church  of  Boston  as 
hitherto,  but  also  to  declare  to  him  that  they  doubt  not  but  if  God  shall  pro- 
ceed in  mooving  him  to  proceed  with  that  church  in  theire  desires,  and  his  ac- 
ceptance of  office  amongst  them,  itt  will  tend  much  to  Gods  glory  and  the 
good  sattisfaccon  and  contentment  of  this  Court  and  the  countrje,  of  which 
they  belejve  he  will  have  no  cawse  to  repent ;  and  further  orders,  that  a  letter 
be  diaime  vp,  and  sent  from  this  Coiut  to  the  church  of  Ijiswich,  with  thankes 
for  theire  love  and  self  deniall  thus  firr,  and  desires  that  they  would  dismisse 
M'  Norton  to  the  church  of  Boston.  Which  letter  is  in  the  booke  of  reccords 
for  letters. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Hugh  Gunnison,  craving  the  rcmittment  of  halfe  Ans'  to  Hugh 

-,  -,  .,.,.,.  i»       •  1        /-i  Gunnisons 

a  yeeres  rent  dew  to  the  countrje  lor  his  drawing  01  wjne,  the  Court  graunts  peticon. 
his  request,  provided  that  he  allow  as  his  act  the  being  and  acting  of  Evan 
Thomas  as  his  compleat  agent  and  debto'  for  all  rents  dew  to  the  countrje  from 
the  tjme  he  left  the  place  and  implojment  heere,  &  pay  the  tenne  shillings  for 
his  peticon. 

In  ans""  to  the  request  of  M''  Jn"  Coggan  and  Willjam  Parks,  ourseers  of  M'  Coggan  & 

W™  Parks 

the  will  of  Ju°  Wooddey,  the  Court  doth  graunt  libcrtje  to  M'^  Jn"  Coggan,  po^g^  to  sell 
William  Parkes,  and  Richard  Wooddey,  Sen,  or  any  two  of  them,  to  make  >"  '""''s-  *<=>  °f 

.(  ./  jjjo  Woodey. 

sale  of  all  the  whole  estate,  viz.,  of  howseing  and  pte  of  the  mill,  togither  w"" 
all  goods  belonging  to  the  estate  of  Jn"  Wooddey,  or  any  debts  belonging  to 
that  estate,  for  the  bennefitt  of  the  mother  and  child ;  provided,  that  securitje 
be  given  by  INI"'  Coggan,  or  any  otlier  that  will  take  the  estate,  for  the  childs 
proporcbn  at  twenty  one  yeares  of  age,  and  that  due  education  and  majnte- 
nance  be  given  out  of  the  proceed  of  the  estate  so  sould,  from  y'  tjme  till  he 
come  to  age,  as  aforesajd,  and  that  the  securitje  be  given  in  at  the  next  County 
Court,  and  ratified  vnto  the  partje  that  receaves  the  childs  porcon. 

Att  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Doner,  Capt  Rich  Walderne  and  Associates  for 
M'  Valentine  Hill  are  appointed  and  authorized  as  associates,  to  sitt  w"*  the 
Magis'^,  and  keepe  the  County  Court  at  Doner  for  this  yeare. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  George  Addams,  the  Courte,  finding  that  he  was  George 
found  guilty  of  selling  two  gunnes  and  strong  waters,  having  nothing  to  sattis-        ^'"^  ''^"' 
fy  the  lawe,  determined  that  he  shall  be  severely  whipt  the  next  lecture  day  at 
Boston,  and  then  discharged  of  the  prison. 

The  Courte,  being  informed  that  Joseph  Fletcher,  servant  to  M'  Hall,  of 


]34  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  5  3.      Salisbury,  who  is  now  in  England,  &  hath  sustajned  great  losse  in  his  cattle  of 
'       '    late,  is  impressed  for  a  souldier,  and  if  he  should  be  sent  forth  vppon  any  ex- 

18  May.  ,.  •  •  ,-,1  ■,    -  ,  •  ,  • 

pedition,  it  would  be  extrcame  damage  to  lum,  this  servant  being  the  cheife 

stay  of  his  family,  judge  it  meete,  therefore,  to  exempt  the  sajd  Joseph  fiom 

any  presse  this  sommer.  •  ■ 

[*123.]  *There  being  formerly  fower  thousand  acres  of  land  graunted  to  the  touue 

300  acres  of      gf  Roxbmy,  of  whicli  M"^  W™  Parks  was  to  have  one  hundred  fower  score, 

land  to  W»  .  .  .  . 

Parks.  and  wliich  vppon  his  request  to  this  Court  Is  heereby  ordered,  with  the  addi- 

tion of  so  much  as  may  make  the  same  three  hundred  acres,  to  be  lajd  out  by 
Capt  Willard  and  Sarjant  John  Sherman,  neere  the  land  lately  graunted  to 
]\I''  Joseph  Hills,  at  a  place  called  Nanacanacus. 

Jn»  Hautliorns  Forasmucli  as  the  cijme  confessed  by  Jn°  Hauthoirne  could  not  easily  be 

legally  prooved  against  him  had  he  not  confessed  it,  and  that  the  lawe  in  that 
case  ordajnes  aequall  punishment  for  all  offences  of  that  nature,  although  of 
different  degrees,  according  vnto  which  all  inferior  Courts  are  bound  to  pro- 
ceed, yett  the  Gennerall  Court,  being  at  more  libertje,  may  proportion  the  pun- 
nishment  according  to  the  difference  of  offences  of  that  nature ;  and  therefore 
this  Court  doth  order,  that  the  peticoner,  in  lejw  of  the  punishment  in  the  lawe 
appointed,  shall  pay  double  damages,  which  is  twenty  pounds,  to  the  party 
wronged,  and  tenn  pounds  to  the  coiiiouwealth  to  be  forthwith  levyed,  and  be 
disfranchised.  If  he  doth  not  submitt  to  the  sentence,  then  the  law  provided 
against  forgerje  is  to  take  place  in  euery  particular  thereof. 

Comission's  to  Itt  is  ordered,  that  Samuell  Winsley,  Thomas  Bradbury,  and  Left  Eofet 

ayou  ^jim-  pj].g  g\-^^\\  ^aue  further  libertje  to  lay  out  the  west  end  of  Hampton  bounds, 
till  the  next  sessions  of  this  Court. 

Resolution  of  a  The  qusestion  being  put,  whither,  by  the  lawe,  title  Weights  and  Measures, 

quEestion  about  i  r.  •  r         •    -y  .  ^  i     ■  ,  i 

lin   of         °''"^  chosen  tor  prooving  01  weights  and  measures   being  a  tounesmaii  when 
measures.  clioseii,  and  being  left  out  the  yeare  following  from  being  a  touncsman,  may 

not  yett  remajne  in  y"  place  of  sealer  and  proover  of  such  weights  and  meas- 
ures, the  Court  resolves  it  on  y'=  affirmative,  so  as  by  a  tounsman  be  meant  a 
selectman. 
Ensigne  How-  Whereas  there  was  an  order  past  the  fii'st  session  of  the  last  Coiut,  that 

Gage  to  lay  out  ^^^^  toune  of  Rowley  should  have  five  hundred  acres  of  land  lajd  out  neere  the 
500  ac's  for       bounds  of  Andeuer,  there  being  none  appointed  to  lay  it  out,  this  Couit,  on 

Kowley. 

theire  request,  doth  order  that  Ensigne  Howlet  and  Corporall  Gage  shall  and 

hereby  are  appointed  to  lay  out  the  sajd  five  hundi-ed  acres. 

Coffiittee  for  This  Court  taking  into  serious  consideracon  the  insupportable  charge  the 

charges  countrje  is  at  in  regard  of  the  vast  expences  at  the  Courts  that  are  kept  in 

this  jurisdiccbn,  which  this  Court  is  wilhng,  if  it  maybe,  to  redi-esse,  and  doe 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  135 


18  May. 


therefore  order  and  appoint,  that  Richard  Bellingham,  Es^,  M'^  W"  Hibbins,      1653. 

M'  Jn°  Glouer,  Capt  Jn°  Leueret,  M'  Rich  Russell,  Cap?  Atherton,  INI''  Jn"    " ^ 

Jn^son,  survejor,  Capt  "VVillard,  M'  Edward  Jackson,  M'^  Joseph  Juett,  and 
Capl  Edward  Johnson  be  a  comittee  to  consider  of  such  wajes  and  meanes  as 
may  lessen  the  charge  of  the  countrje  by  lessening  ^  noumber  of  deputjes, 
giving  more  power  to  comissioners  in  tounes  for  ending  of  cawses,  referring 
what  maybe  to  inferior  Courts,  that  the  Gennerall  Court  be  not  troubled  with 
smale  matters,  but  to  act  only  in  matters  of  higher  concernment,  and  what  els 
they,  or  the  major  pt  of  them,  meeting,  shall  judge  meete  for  the  attajnement 
of  those  ends  ;  and  that  it  shallbe  in  the  power  of  Richard  Bellingham,  Esffi, 
to  appoint  both  tjme  and  place  for  the  meeting  of  this  coiiiittee. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Steephen  Kent  for  the  remittment  of  the  fine  y'  Steephen 
was  imposed  on  him  by  the  last  sessions,  the  Court  seeth  no  reason  to  grant  continewed 
his  request. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  John  Guppy,  craving  remittment  of  y*  fine  the  Jn«  Gupp> 
law  imposeth  on  such  as  give  in  more  voates  then  one  for  Magistrates  at  the  2o> 
eleccon,  professing  what  he  did  in  such  a  way  was  through  his  ignorance  of 
the  lawe,  the  Court  abates  the  fine  to  twenty  shillings. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Cap?  Thomas  Wiggin  for  a  writt  of  divicon  of  Ans'  to  Capt. 
the  two  pattents  of  Swampscott,  the  Court  referrs  the  divicon  thereof  vntill  the  peticon. 
yeare  1654,  in  October,  and  order,  in  the  meane  tjme,  there  be  a  forbearance 
of  falUng  of  wood  and  tjmber  vppon  the  lands  exprest  in  y'  peticon. 

*The  inhabitants  of  the  toune  of  Springfeild,  presenting  theire  desires  by     [*  124.1 
theire  deputy,  for  seuerall  things,  viz.,  that  they  might  have  some  man  author-  Courts  graunt 

t  •  t        r  1  1  111  Springfeild. 

ized  to  give  the  freemans  oath  to  such  as  are  capable  to  take  the  same,  that 
they  might  haue  a  great  gunn  lent  to  theire  toune,  &  that  theire  millitaiy  offi- 
cers chosen  two  yeares  since  may  by  this  Court  be  allowed  and  confirmed,  any 
late  lawe  notw^'standing,  —  in  ans''  whereto  this  Court  doth  order,  that  M''  Jn° 
Piuchon  and  M"^  Elitzur  HoUocke  shall  and  heereby  are  impowred  to  give  the 
freemans  oath  to  such  as  are  capable  to  take  it  there ;  and  that  they  shall  haue 
a  great  gunne  lent  them  during  the  Courts  pleasure,  if  any  such  gun  cann  be 
found  vndisposed  of;  and  as  touching  theire  millitaiy  officers,  this  Court  judg- 
eth  it  meet  for  y^  present  only  to  confirme  M"^  Jn"  Pinchon  for  theire  leii, 
and  M"^  Elitzur  Holioke  for  theire  ensigne ;  referring  the  confirmation  of  M'^ 
Smith  to  be  theire  capt  vntill  he  shall  retourne  from  England. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants   of  the  He  of  Shoales,  itt  is  Ans'  to  y  lie 
ordered,  that  the  peticoners  shall  haue  libertje  of  detennuiing  ciuill  actions  petjcon 
which  shall  concerne  them,  where  either  one  or  both  parties  are  inhabitants, 
and  taken  there,  to  the  value  of  tenn  pounds,  and  that  M'  Brjan  Pendleton, . 


136  THE  KECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

M'  Niccolas  Shapleigh,  Hercules  Hunkins,  Eichard  Seely,  and  Phillip  Babb 
be  coinissioners  for  such  cases,  and  that  they,  or  any  three  of  them,  M'  Pen- 
dleton or  M"'  Shapley  being  one,  may  heare  and  determine  all  such  cases 
legally  brought  before  them,  according  to  lawe,  till  this  Coui't  take  further 
order  therein ;  and  for  setling  of  the  millitary  officers  and  company,  the 
Court  hath  already  provided  in  that  case,  in  the  order  for  setling  of  the 
militja,  made  anno  1652,  which  gives  the  cheife  officer  of  euery  company 
power  to  act  heerein ;  and  for  clarke  of  the  writts,  none  being  presented,  its 
left  to  the  discretion  of  the  coinissioners  aforesaid,  or  the  majo"^  part  of  them, 
to  appoint  a  meete  man  for  that  service,  till  the  Court  shall  take  further  order 
therein. 
A  new  planta-  In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  Springfeild,  &6,  craving 

y«'inhabitants    liberty  &  authoritje  to  erect  a  new  plantacftn  and  tounesliip  at  Nonotucke,  &d, 
of  Springfeild.  j^t  is  Ordered,  that  M"^  Jn°  Pinchon,  M"^  Elitzur  Holioke,  and  Samuell  Chapiu 

Vide  p«  188.  .  _.  .    .  . 

shallbe,  and  heereby  are,  appointed  a  comittee  to  diuide  the  land  peticoned  for 
into  two  plantacons,  and  that  the  peticoners  make  choice  of  one  of  them, 
where  they  shall  haue  libertje  to  plant  themselves,  provided  they  shall  not 
apropriate  to  any  planter  above  one  hundred  acres  of  all  sorts  of  land,  where- 
of not  above  twenty  acres  of  meadow,  till  twenty  inhabitants  haue  planted  & 
setled  themselves  vppon  the  place,  who  shall  have  power  to  distribute  the 
land,  and  give  out  proporcons  of  land  to  the  seuerall  inhabitants,  according  to 
theire  estates  or  eminent  qualiffications,  as  in  other  tounes  of  this  jurisdiccon. 
2000  acres  of  Por  the  incouragement  of  Harvard  CoUedge  and  the  society  thereof,  and 

trHa^vard'^*^    for  the  more  comfortable  majntenance  and  provicon  for  the  p>sident,  ffellowes, 
CoUedge.  and  students  thereof  in  time  to  come,  this  Court  doth  graunt  vnto  the  sajd 

society  and  corporation,  for  the  ends  aforesaid,  two  thousand  acres  of  land 
w^'in  this  jurisdiccon,  not  formerly  graunted  to  any  other,  to  be  taken  vp  in 
two  or  three  places,  where  it  maybe  found  convenient ;  and  to  this  end  it  is  de- 
sired that  the  sajd  corporation  of  the  colledge  doe  appoint  some  persons  in 
theire  behalfe  to  finde  out  the  places  where  such  land  may  be  freely  taken, 
and  to  make  retourne  assoone  as  they  may,  that  the  Court  may  more  pticcu- 
larly  and  expressly  confirme  the  same. 
[*125.]  *Iii  ans'  to  the    peticon    of  seuerall  of  the  Inhabitants  of  Concord  & 

Ans'  to  Con-     Woobourne  for  the  erecting  of  a  new  plantacon  on  Merremacke  Riuer,  neerc 

cord  peticon.  ,  r  /^  i  i    -ixr 

to  Pawtuckett,  the  Court  doth  graunt  the  peticoners  ot  Concord  and  Woo- 
bourne the  tract  of  land  menconed  in  theire  peticon,  excepting  some  part  of  it 
joyning  to  Merremacke  Eiuer,  provided  that  the  sajd  peticoners  shall  suffi- 
cjently  breake  vp  full  so  much  land  for  the  Indjans  in  such  place  as  they 
shall  appointe,  w"'in  such  plantacon  as  shall  there  be  appointed  them,  as  they 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  .  137 

haue  of  planting  ground  about  a  hill  called  Robbins  Hill,  and  that  the  Indjans      165  3. 
shall  haue  vse  of  theire  planting  ground,  aforesajd,  free  of  all  damages,  vntill    "       '^       ' 
the  peticbners  shall  haue  broken  vp  the  land  for  the  Indjans  as  aforesajd. 

S'*'.  For  the  plantacon  peticoned  for  by  M''  Eljott,  the  Court  judgeth  it  Ans'toM' 
mecte  to  be  graunted  thcni,  w"'  the  exceptions  and  provissions  aforementioned,  ;„  beh.iife  of 
and  for  the  stating  of  both,  that  Capt  Willard  and  Capt  Johnson  be  appointed  ^^^  Indjans. 
to  lay  out  the  sajd  plantacons  or  touneshipps,  the  English  at  the  charge  of  the 
peticbners,  the  Indjans  at  the  charge  of  the  countrje,  w*''in  one  month  after 
the  end  of  this  sessions,  that  neither  of  the  plantacons  be  retarded. 

3'^.  That  if  the  peticouers  of  Concord  and  Woobom-ne  shall  not,  w'^'in  Condicon  of 
two  yeares,  setle  a   competent  noumber   of  familjes  there,  by  building  and  woobem  plan 
planting  vppon  the  sajd  tract  of  land  twenty  familjes  or  vpwards,  so  as  they  **''°°- 
may  be  in   capacitje  of  injojang  all  the   ordjnances  of  God  there,  then  the 
graunt  to  be  vojd. 

In  ans"^  to  the  pctlcous  of  INP  Eobt  Knight  and  Mcncn  Cornellison,  the  Courts  judg- 

„  1        •         1  1  1  •  1         1      n     1  •  1  •        ,  ,  raentin  Meuen 

Court,  having  heard  and  considered  all  the  evidences  m  the  case  betweene  Comeffisons 
Menen  Cornellison  and  M'  Robt  Knight  and  the  rest  of  the  administrators  to  ''^^' 
the  estate  of  Capt  Howsen,  doe  ai^proove  and  confirmc  the  judgment  of  the 
former  Gennerall  Court  in  that  respect,  and  declare  the  proceeding  of  the 
marshall  and  the  apprizers  of  certajne  lands  on  the  Fort  Hill  to  be  null,  and 
orders,  that  the  secretary  shall  issue  out  an  execution  for  the  seventy  eight 
pounds  sixe  shillings,  determined  by  the  award  of  M"^  Davisson,  JM'^  Garrett, 
and  M''  Walker,  the  dew  of  iNIenen  Cornelison  on  the  estate  of  the  sajd  Roftt 
Knight,  or  any  of  the  administrators. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Job  Lane,  in  the  behalfe  of  Ebedmeleck,  his  Kbedmelecka 
servant,  for  the  remittment  of  the  rigor  of  the  lawe,  &6,  the  Court  judgeth  it  sm^*^^"^"^  ''^'^' 
meete,  that  the  sajd  Ebedmelecke,  for  his  stealing  victualls  and  breaking  of)en 
a  window  on  the   Lords   day,  shall,  the    next  lecture   day,   be  whipt  with 
five  stripes. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  IM""  Thomas  Gayner,  the  Court,  finding  vppon  Ans'  to  M' 
record  that  M'  Gayners  attourney,  in  May,  (52,)  proffered,  that  if  M"'  Aspin-  joj"'^'^*  ''^"' 
wall  would  take  his  oath  that  the  buisinesse  of  the  ship  Planter  was  included 
in  the  acq^uittance  produced,  that  it  should  issue  and  determine  the  case,  the 
which  also  M"'  Aspinwall  did,  and  therefore  judge  M"'  Gayner  is  thereby  barred, 
and  hath  no  ground  of  farther  complajnt  to  tliis  Court  in  respect  to  that  case, 
but  should  therein  acquiesce. 

In  ails'"  to  the  peticon  of  the  touiie  of  Lynne,  itt  is  ordered,  w""  relation  10'^  p  ann.  ann- 

I        ^ ,  ,.  ,  .  „  ^  1     n    1  11  ,    ually  allowd 

to  the  Uourts  tormer  engagement,  tliat  the  toune  of  Lynne  shall  be  allowed  („  Lynue. 
tenn  pounds  p  annum  by  the  country,  so  long  as  the  iron  workes  shallbe 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  18 


M'  HiUs 
rccompenc. 


138  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

165  3.      continued,  or   during   the   tjme   of   tliciie   imunltjes    from   publicke  charges 
'      ^'        '    grauuted  by  the  Court. 

18  May.  ^ 

A  great  gunu  Whereas  the  toune  and  jjlantacon  of  Dedham  being  somewhat  remote, 

lent  to  Ded-      ^^^  maybe  in  more  dainger  then  some  others  are,  this  Court  doth  therefore 

ham,  &c.  •'  ° 

order,  that  the  surveior  gennerall  shall  deliuer  vuto  the  selectmen  of  Dedham 

one  of  those  drakes  at  Eoxbury,  (pvided  they  sattisfy  them  what  charge  they 

haue  expended  in  mounting  the  sajd  gun,  and  also  keepe  it  in  good  repaier,) 

fitt  for  service,  and  the  survejo"^  gennerall  is   heereby  inipowred  to  fetch  a 

greater  gun  from  Dorchester  to  Roxbury,  if  it  be  desired,  paying   for  the 

mounting  of  it. 

Ans'toM'  In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  M''  Joseph  Eockc,  the  Court  declares,  that  a 

man  chosen  to  the  office  of  a  counstable,  and  refusing  to  accept  it,  is  liable  to 

no  more  then  one  fine,  and  may  not  be  put  vppon  the  same  office  the  same 

yeare,  and  that  the  petitioner,  paying  the  first  fine,  w"^*^  is  twenty  shillings,  is 

to  pay  no  further  fine. 

[*126.]  *In  aus''  to  the  peticon  of  M'  Joseph  Hills,  desiring  due  recompense  for 

his  service  doune  the  country  about  the  lawes,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meet  to 

allow  him  tenne  pounds  out  of  the  next  countrjo  rate. 

M'  Knights  In  aiis^  to  the  peticbns  of  M"^  Niccolas  Shajjleigh  and  ^M""  Robt  Knight, 

M'  Shaplcy  re-  ^^^  Court  grauiited  a  hearing  of  the  case  betwixt  them ;  and,  on  the  hearing 

'*^'-  and  examination  of  all  the  evidence  produced  in  Court,  the  Court  judgeth  it 

mecte  to  reuerse  the  judgment  of  the  Court  of  Asistants,  the  5'''  of  the  7  in, 

48,  so  farr  as  it  any  way  respects  the  sajd  M''  Shapleigh. 

Case  bet.  M"  In  ans''  to  the  reqiiest  of  M''  Joseph  ]\Iason,  agent  for  INI"''  Ann  INIason, 

Leader  refold    ^'^"^  ^^'  Thaddeus  Riddan,  agent  for  M'  Richard  Leader,  the  determination 

to  y  next  ses-   ^f  ye  action  bctweene  them  is  respited  till  the  next  session. 

sions. 

Countrje  high-  "Whereas,  by  order  from  the  Gennerall  Court,  these  fewer  tonnes,  Ips- 

dTr  to°i         wich,  Newbury,  Rowley,  and  Andevor,  should  appointe  men  to  lay  out  the 
wich.New-        coiiion  higliwajes  for  the  country  from  toune  to  toune,  wee,  the  men  appointed, 

berry,  &  Kow-  ... 

ley.  haue  accordingly  donne  it,  beginning  at  the  south  end  of  Andiuer,  contjnew- 

ing  it  in  the  cartway  ueere  halfe  a  mile,  vnto  a  hill  at  the  foote  of  a  hill 
called  Bare  Hill,  as  it  is  marked  w""  trees ;  then  coming  into  the  beaten  way 
which  leadeth  ouer  a  plajne  belonging  to  Rowley,  so  leading  on  the  southwest 
of  a  pond  called  Five  Mile  Pond  ;  so  continuing  the  cartway  vnto  a  pond  called 
M'  Bakers  Pond,  leaving  the  pond  on  the  south,  and  so  passing  ouer  a  little 
stiipp  of  meadow  j  so  on  the  cart  way  to  ISI"^  Winthrops  plajne,  and  so  still  the 
cart  way  on  the  south  side  of  Capt  Turners  Hill,  and  from  thence  the  Ijeaten 
way  to  Ipswich. 


18  M 


ly. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY  IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  139 

Now,  halfc  ;i  mile  short  of  tlie  Five  Mile  Pond,  from  Andiiier,  bcginis  the  10  5  3. 
■way  to  RoA\ley  and  Ncwbery,  goin<^  in  the  beaten  way  of  the  south  side  of 
the  Bald  Hills,  and  contjnuing  the  beaten  way  vutill  it  come  to  the  vppermost 
Falls  Riuer,  then  by  marked  trees  leading  into  the  cart  path  leading  from 
Hauerell  to  to  Rowley,  so  on  to  a  new  feild  of  Rowlejcs  on  the  south  side,  and 
from  thence,  as  it  is  marked  by  trees,  to  Rowley.  Now,  the  way  from  An- 
diuer  to  Newbeiy  goes  on  y'=  old  cart  way,  leaving  Rowley  way  at  the  begin- 
ing  of  a  plajne  by  a  litle  swampe  called  Beareberry  Swamp ;  so  on  y°  old 
way  to  the  Falls  Riuer,  and  from  thence  streight  vppon  the  north  side  of  M'' 
Sewalls  feild,  as  still  doth  appeare  by  marked  trees ;  from  thence  keejiing  the 
old  cart  way  ouer  the  head  of  Cart  Crceke  ;  and  so  runing  on  the  north  side 
of  Richard  Thorleys  feild,  as  it  is  now  fenced,  and  so  to  John  Hulls  bridge, 
and  so  ouer  the  end  of  John  Hulls  plajne,  vnto  M'^  Woodmans  bridge,  nere 
the  mill  at  Newbery.  Witnes  our  hands,  all  these  wayes  genn''"y  is  to  be 
six  rod  broad. 

THO:    HALE, 
JN"  PICKARD, 
JAMES   HOW, 
RICH:    BARKER. 

The  Court  approoved  of  this  retourne. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Nashaway,  the  Court  finds,  Nashaway 
according  to  a  former  order  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  in  ann"  1647,  no:  6:  95,  P^*''°' 
1.  That  the  ordering  and  disposing  of  the  plantacon  at  Nashaway  is  wholy  in 
this  Courts  power. 

2.  Considering  that  there  is  already  at  Nashaway  about  9  familjes,  and 
that  seuerall,  both  freemen  and  others,  intend  to  goe  and  setle  there,  some 
whereof  are  named  in  this  peticon,  the  Court  doth  graunt  them  the  libertje  of 
a  touneship,  and  orders  that  henceforth  it  shall  be  called  Lancaster. 

3.  That  the  bounds  thereof  shall  be  sett  out  according  to  a  deede  of  the 
Indjan  sagamore,  viz.,  Nashaway  Riuer  at  the  passing  ouer  to  be  center,  five 
miles  north,  five  miles  south,  five  miles  east,  and  three  miles  west,  by  such 
commissioners  as  the  Court  shall  appoint  to  see  these  lines  extended  and 
their  bounds  limitted. 

••4.    That  Edward  Brecke,  Nathaniel!  Hadlocke,  Willjam  Carby,  Tho      [*127.] 
Saujcr,  Jn°  Prescott,  and  Ralfe  Haughton,   or  any  fower  of  them,  whereof 
the   majo''  pte   to   be  freemen,  to  be  for   {5>sent  the   prudentiall  men   of  the 
sajd  touue,  both  to  see  all  alotments  to  be  lajd  out  to  the  planters  in  due 
proportion  to  theire  estates,  and  also  to  order  other  prudentiall  afiaiies,  vntill 


140  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


165  3.  it  shall  appeare  to  this  Court  that  the  place  be  so  farr  seated  w*  able  men  as 
the  Court  may  jvulgc  meete  to  give  them  full  libertjes  of  a  touneshipp,  accord- 
in":  to  la^ye. 


18  May. 


Courts  graunt  5.    That  all  such  psons  who  have  possessed  and  continewed  inhabitants 

0    ancas  er.     ^^  Nashaway  shall  haue  tlieke  lotts,  formerly  lajd  out,  confii-med  to  them,  pro- 
vided they  take  the  oath  of  fidellitje. 

6.  That  Sudbury  and  Lancaster  lay  out  highwajes  betweene  tomie  & 
toune,  according  to  order  of  Court,  for  the  couutrjes  vse,  and  then  repajer 
them  as  neede  shall  be. 

7.  The  Court  orders,  that  Lancaster  shallbe  rated  w*in  the  county  of 
Midlesex,  and  the  toune  hath  liberty  to  choose  a  counstable. 

8.  That  the  inhabitants  of  Lancaster  doe  take  care  that  a  godly  ministery 
may  be  maintajned  amongst  them,  and  that  no  evill  persons,  enemjes  to  the 
lawes  of  this  coiiion-wcalth  in  judgment  or  practize,  be  admitted  as  inhabit- 
ants amongst  them,  and  none  to  lottes  confirmed  but  such  as  take  the  oath 
of  fidellitje. 

9.  That  although  the  first  vndertakers  and  copartners  in  the  plantacon  of 
Nashaway  are  wholy  evaccuated  of  theire  clajme  in  lotts  there  by  order  of  this 
Court,  yett,  that  such  psons  of  them  -who  haue  expended  either  charge  or 
labor  for  the  bennefitt  of  the  place,  and  haue  helped  on  the  publicke  workes 
there  from  tjme  to  tjme,  either  in  contributing  to  the  ministry,  or  in  the  pur- 
chase from  the  Indeans,  or  any  other  publicke  worke,  that  such  persons  are 
to  be  considered  by  the  toune,  either  in  proporcon  of  land,  or  some  other 
vray  of  sattisfacon,  as  may  be  just  and  meete,  provided  such  persons  doe 
make  such  theue  expenses  cleerely  appeare  w^'in  twelve  months  after  the  end 
of  this  sessions  for  such  demands ;  and  that  the  interest  of  Harmon  Garrett, 
and  such  others  as  were  first  vndertakers,  or  haue  binn  at  great  charges  there, 
shallbe  made  good  to  him,  them,  his,  or  theire  heires,  in  all  allotments,  as  to 
other  the  iuliabitants,  in  proporcon  to  the  charges  expended  by  him  and  such 
others  aforesajd,  provided  they  make  improovemeut  of  such  allotments,  by 
building  and  planting,  w"'in  three  yeares  after  they  are,  or  shallbe,  lajd  out  to 
them  ;  otherwise  theire  interest  heereby  provided  for  to  be  vojd,  and  all  such 
lands  so  heereby  reserved  to  be  thenceforth  at  the  tonnes  dispose.  In  further 
ans'  to  this  peticon,  the  Coiut  judgeth  it  meete  to  confirme  the  above  men- 
tioned nine  pticulars  to  the  inhabitants  of  Lancaster,,  and  order  that  the 
bounds  thereof  be  lajd  out  in  proporcon  to  eight  miles  square. 

Coffiissioners  ^^^  '^^  ordered,  that  the  coiuissioners   for  the  Vnited  Colonjes  shall,  & 

for  the  col-       heereby  are  desired  to,  continew  heere,  and  not  depart  till  the  messengers 

lonjes  desired 

to  stay.  sent  to  the  Monhatoes  be  retourned ;  and  then,  vppon  the  answere  brought 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  14] 


IS  May. 


from  the  Dutch,  there  may  be  ground  of  proceeding  accordingly ;  and  if  the      165  3. 
comissioners  please,  the  Court  doeth  thinke  it  will  be  convcnjcnt  to  send  a 
messenger  away  speedily  to  bring  away  the  coiiiissions  for  such  as  are,  or 
shallbe,  chosen  coiiiissioners  for  the  two  jurisdiccbns  of  Conecticut  and  New 
Hauen,  that  so  if  God  call  vnto  a  warre,  there  may  not  be  any  interruption. 

Three  qusestions  being  propounded  by  the  comissioners  to  y"  Couit, 
viz., — 

1.  Whither  the  last  meeting  of  the  comissioners  at  Boston  were  not  le- 
gally called,  and  maybe  legally  continewed. 

*2.  Whither  the  coiiiissioners  of  Conecticot,  whose  tjme  is  expired,  may      [*128.] 
not  joyne  w"^  the  other  coiiiissioners,  and  act  w""  them. 

3.  Whither  the  adjournement  of  the  meeting  to  New  Hauen  from' 
Boston  doth  binde  the  new  coiiiissioners  to  attend  it. 

1.  To  the  first  quajst,  the  Court  resolved,  that  the  last  meeting  was  legally 
called,  but  is,  and  was,  dissolved  vjjpon  the  expiration  of  the  coiiiissioners  of 
Massachusetts  and  C'ouccticott. 

2.  The  second  quicst  the  Court  resolved  on  the  negative. 

3.  The  third  qua?st  the  Court  resolved  on  the  negative. 

Vppon  the  case  stated  in  reference  vnto  the  injurjes  and  differences  with 
the  Dutch,  this  Gennerall  Court  doth  desire  a  consultacon  w'*"  the  gentlemen 
the  coiiiissioners,  taking  in  the  advise  of  such  elders  as  shallbe  present  at  the 
tjme  appointed. 

^l^  Samuell  Symons,  Major  Gennerall  Dennison,  Capt  Jn"  Leueret,  and 
Cap?  Humphry  Atherton,  as  a  coiiiittce  to  joyne  with  such  of  the  coiiiissioners 
for  the  ^  nited  Colonjes  as  they  shall  please  to  nominate,  to  draw  vp  the  case 
respecting  the  Dutch  and  Indeans. 

The  coiiiissioners  retourned  Capt  Hauthorne,  M''  Bradford,  M''  Ludlow, 
&  M'^  Eaton,  to  joyne  in  y'  coiiiittee. 

The  coiiiittee,  considering  of  the  case,  and  not  agreeing  in  one,  presented 
the  case  in  two  draughts,  which  are  on  file,  together  w"^  the  advice  of  y" 
elders. 

Itt  was  put  to  the  qua;stion,  whither  the  coiiiissioners  of  the  Vnited  Col- 
onjes should  be  called  by  this  Gennerall  Court  to  assemble  together  to  consult 
of,  and  and  determine  the  weighty  affaires  of  the  seuerall  colonjes  heere 
in  Boston  forthwith,  or  assoonc  as  maybe ;  the  Courte  resolved  it  on  the 
affirmative. 

il''  Samuell  Symons,  IMajo""  Gennerall  Daniell  Dennison,  Capt  Humphiy 
Atherton,  M"'  Rich  Russell,  M"'  Joseph  Hills,  &  Capt  Edward  Johnson  are 
appointed  a  coiiiittee  to  consider  of  this  question  —  wliither  the  coiiiissioners 


142  THE  KEC0RD3  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1653.      of  the  Vnitecl  Collonjes  haiie  power,  by  the  artickles  of  agreement,  to  deter- 

''  mine  the  justice  of  an   oftcncive  or  vindictive  warre,  and  to  ingage  the  cel- 

ls May.       1     .      ,,        . 
loujes  therein. 

The  answer  of  the  coiiiittee  to  the  qusestion,  first  more  particulai'ly  from 
the  artickles. 

The  whole  power  of  gouernment  and  jurisdiccon  is,  in  the  third  and  sixt 
article,  reserved  to  euery  collony  who  sawe  not  nieete  to  diuest  themselves 
of  thelre  authority  ;  to  invest '  the  coiiiissioners  with  any  part  thereof  being 
altogether  vnsafe  and  vnnecessary  to  attajne  the  end  of  the  coufocderacy. 

The  ninth  and  tenth  artickles  constitutes  the  coiiiissioners  judges  of  the 
justice  of  a  defensive  warre. 

The  fowerth  and  fifth  setles  rules  for  leagues,  aids,  nomber  of  men  in  a 
defensive  warre,  and  divission  of  spojles,  but  no  where  provides  for  the  deter- 
mination of  the  justice  of  an  offencive  warre,  which  therefore  is  reserved 
wholy  to  the  determination  of  the  supreame  power  of  the  seuerall  confoederate 
jurisdiccbns,  who  would  otherwise  haue  provided  in  that  case. 

The  sixt  artickle,  which,  at  first  vjew,  seemes  to  inable  the  coiiiissioners, 
will  evidently  evince  the  contrary,  for  the  confoederacy  being  betwixt  the 
[*129.]  collonjes,  the  4"",  5*,  9"",  &  10"^  artickles  provides  rules  in  seuerall  *cascs, 
according  to  which  the  confoederates  haue  bound  themselves  to  act,  and  the 
sixt  artickle  only  orders  and  appoints  who  and  in  what  manner  the  sajd  rules 
and  agreements  should  be  executed,  viz.,  by  coiiiissioners,  (impowred  to  act 
in  the  cases  specifjed  and  regulated  in  the  former  artickles,  who  were  also 
bounded  and  regulated  for  theire  noumber,  manner  of  proceeding,  tjmes  and 
places  of  meeting  in  the  6  and  7  artickle,)  and  that  by  necessity,  becawse  the 
supreame  powres  of  the  seuerall  jurisdiccons  could  not  assemble ;  they  were 
enforced  to  substitute  delegates  to  order  such  things  as  were  of  present  and 
vrgeut  necessity,  or  meerely  prudentiall  and  polittical,  or  of  inferior  nature, 
and  that  according  to  the  rules  preso'ibed  by  the  confoederates ;  but  such 
things  as  requicr  the  highest  acts  of  authoritje  are  in  theire  nature  of  morrall 
consideration,  and  may  admitt  of  more  tjme  of  deliberation ;  as  an  ofFenciue 
warre,  the  wisdome  of  the  contriuers  of  the  confoederacy  did  not  judge  meete 
to  referr  to  coiiiissioners,  and  therefore  haue  not  provided  any  rules  in  those 
cases  of  highest  concernment,  as  they  did  in  all  cases  of  an  inferior  nature. 
2'-^.  More  generally,  the  coiiiissioners  of  the  Vnited  Collonjes  are  not  (so  farr 
as  wee  cann  discernc)  invested  -with  power  to  conclude  an  ofiencivc  warre,  and 
to  ingage  the  collonjes  to  which  they  belong  to  put  the  same  in  execution, 
further  then  they  are  inabled  by  coiiiission  or  instructions,  vnder  the  scale  of 
theire  colonjes ;  much  lesse  cann  it  stand  w*  the  jurisdiccon  and  right  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  143 

gouernment  reserved  to  euery  collony,  for  sixe  comlssioners  of  the  other 
coUonjes  to  put  forth  any  act  of  power,  iu  a  vindictive  warrc,  ■\vhereby  they 
shall  coiuand  the  collouy  dissenting  to  asist  them  in  the  same  ;  neither  cann  it 
be  the  meaning  of  the  seuerall  coUonjes,  who  are  so  tender  of  theire  power 
in  gouerning  theire  oune,  that  they  should  put  this  power  out  of  theire  oune 
hands,  in  the  most  weighty  points  —  a  bondage  hardly  to  be  borne  by  the 
most  subjected  people,  and  cannot  be  conceived  so  free  a  people  as  the  Vnited 
CoUonjes  should  submitt  vnto. 

It  cann  be  no  Icsse  then  a  contradiction  to  affiime  the  supreame  power 
(which  wee  take  to  be  the  Gcnuerall  Courts  of  each  jurisdiccon)  cann  be 
coinanded  by  others  ;  an  absurdity  in  pollicy,  that  an  iutler  gouernment  and 
jurisdiccon  should  prostitute  itself  to  the  coiiiand  of  straungers  ;  a  scandal  to 
religion,  that  a  Gennerall  Court  of  Christjans  should  be  obliged  to  act  and 
ingage  vppon  the  faithe  of  sixe  delegates,  against  theire  conscience  —  all  which 
must  be  admitted  in  case,  if  wee  acknowledge  ourselves  bound  to  vndertake  an 
offencive  warre,  vppon  the  bare  determination  of  the  coinissi  oners,  who  cannot, 
nor  euer  did,  challeng  authoritje  ouer  vs,  or  expect  subjection  from  vs. 

And  to  add  tliis  further  :  the  case  in  hand  may  be  considered  vnder  a 
double  head  ;  first,  what  ^  suj)reame  gouernor  of  a  comonwealth,  in  point  of 
confoederation  with  another  nation,  may  doe. 

Secondly,  what  this  gouernment,  in  reference  to  the  qua:stion  iu  hand, 
hath  donne.  Concerning  the  first  of  these,  itt  is  to  be  considered  what  they 
may  not,  nextly,  what  they  may  doe.  Touching  the  last  first,  they  are  to  act 
in  all  cases  not  reserved  expressely  or  implicitly  ;  concerning  the  other,  they 
may  not  act  against  fundamentall  lawes,  or  what  else  the  people  have  referred 
to  themselves. 

The  next  thing  is  to  consider,  (in  some  instance,)  what  the  fundamentall 
lawes  are :  — 

A  fundamentall  lawe  of  a  people  or  coiiionwealth  is,  to  haue  liberty  and 
to  excercise  jinediate  chojce  of  theire  oune  goucrnors,  bccawsc  the  supreame 
gouerno"  are  betrusted  w"'  theire  lives  and  estates,  iu  whom,  vnder  God,  they 
doe  acquiesse ;  but  if  they  may  deligate  others,  in  the  ade  of  themselves, 
that  are  iiuedjately  chosen,  then  they  may  elect  or  accept  of  straungers,  that 
is  to  say,  such  as  are  of  another  coiiionwealth ;  and  such  deligates  may  also, 
vppon  the  same  ground,  impower  others,  and  that  w"'out  restriction  of  nation 
or  noumber ;  which  principle  must  needs  be  destructive  to  such  a  coiiionwealth, 
for  then  they  may  act  to  make  an  offenciue  warre,  which  is  an  act  of  power  in 
the  highest  nature. 

Concerning  the  second  quaestion :  — 


144 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1  G  5  3. 

1  June. 

[*130.] 


*What  this  goueniement,  in  reference  to  this  confocderation,  hath  cTonne : 
Itt  is  a  rule  iu  lawe,  that  in  an)-  legall  act,  what  expressions  or  sentences  are 
in  it  of  dowbtfull  constrnction,  the  same  are  to  be  vnderstood  for  the  firming 
thereof,  as  liirr  as  maybe,  viz.,  not  being  contradictory,  not  being  impfect  or 
vninteUigible,  or  not  above  or  beyond  the  power  of  the  acto". 

This  being  graunted,  then  the  artickles  touching  ofFencive  warr  maybe 
referred  either  to  the  beginning  of  the  warre,  or  to  the  directing  or  manna- 
ging  of  it  by  the  coiiiissioners. 

If  any  of  the  artickles  shoukl  be  taken  in  the  first  sence,  namely,  to  give 
power  to  the  coinissioners  to  make  an  ofFencive  warre,  then  it  is  against  funda- 
mental! lawe,  as  before  appeareth ;  and  besides  the  ground  before  mentioned, 
this  maybe  added :  in  case  the  coinissioners  should  conclude  a  warre  ofFencive 
against  the  judgment  of  the  gouerno",  (who  are  to  act  in  theire  oime  juris- 
diccon,)  then  they  must  act  to  effect  it  either  against  theire  oune  consciences, 
or  else  leaue  the  worke  in  a  distractiue  condicon. 

But  if  it  be  taken  in  the  latter  sence,  namely,  to  direct  the  warr,  being 
begunne,  it  is  safe  and  prudentiall,  becawso  the  fower  gouernments  in  this 
confocderation  cannot  carry  on  a  warre  that  doth  joynctly  concerne  them  to  act 
in ;  though  to  conclude  or  accept  of  such  a  propposicon  or  determination,  by 
the  coiiiissioners,  for  such  a  warre,  may  and  doth  proj)perly  belong  to  all  the 
gouernments  before  they  be  ingaged.     This  retourne  was  signed  by 

SAMUELL  SYMONS, 
EICH:  RUSSELL, 
DANIELL  DENNISON, 
JOS:  HILLS, 

HUMPHRY  ATHERTON, 
EDWARD  JOHNSON. 

2''  June,  1653.  And  was  approoved  of  by  the  Gennerall  Court. 


Courts  decla- 
rauon  still  to 
continew  y« 
confcederac- 
con. 


Whereas  it  is  conceaved  by  some,  that  the  end  of  this  Courts  sending 
theire  judgements  concerning  the  artickles  of  confccderation  vnto  the  honnored 
coinissioners  was,  or  is,  the  breaking  of  the  league  of  confosderation  with  the 
rest  of  the  colonjes,  this  Court  doth  therefore  signify  vnto  all  whom  it  may 
concerne,  and  that  there  may  be  a  right  vnderstanding  betwixt  this  Court  and 
the  honnored  coniissioners,  that  it  was  not  in  the  least  intended,  neither  is  it 
desired ;  but  as  God  hath  binn  pleased  hitherto  to  keepe  vs  together  in  peace 
and  love,  so  wee  desire  he  will  so  doe  still,  to  his  glory  arid  all  our  comforts. 

Whereas  the  Court  at  Salisbury  was  adjourned  to  the  2'^  3**  day  of  the 
^sent  4""  month,  by  reason  of  troubles   about   the   ludjans,  and  some   psons 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  145 

having  qufcstioned  the  legallltje  thereof,  this  Court  cloth  order  the  foresajd      1653. 
adjournement  shall  stand  good,  and  the  sajd  Court  to  be  kept  accordingly.  '       "<       ' 

Jn°  Betts,  of  Cambridge,  being  at  a  Court  of  Asistants,  on  his  triall  for 
his  life,  for  the  cruelty  he  excercised  on  Eol3t  Knight,  his  servant,  striking 
him  w""  a  plowstaffe,  &&,  who  died  shortly  after  it,  the  jury  brought  in  theu-e 
verdict,  which  the  JNIagis''  not  receiving,  came,  in  course,  to  be  trjed  by  the 
Gcnnerall  Court.  Jn"  Betts,  the  prisoner,  came  accordingly  to  his  triall,  sub- 
mitted himself  for  triall  to  God  and  the  country,  &  pleaded  not  guilty  to  his 
indictment.  The  evidences  against  him  being  examined  &  heard,  the  Coui't 
proceeded  to  censure  him,  viz. :  — 

The  Gennerall  Coui-t  doe  not  finde  Jn°  Betts  legally  guilty  of  the  murdering 
of  his  late  servant,  Robert  Knight;  but  forasmuch  as  the  evidence  brought  in 
against  him  houlds  forth  vnto  this  Court  strong  presumptions  and  great  probabil- 
Ijtjes  of  his  guilt  of  so  bloody  a  fact,  and  that  he  hath  excercised  and  multipljed 
inhumaine  crueltjes  vppon  the  sajd  Knight,  this  Courte  doth  therefore  thinke 
meete,  that  the  *said  Jn°  Betts  be  sentenced,  viz. :  1.  That  the  next  lecture  [*  131.] 
day  at  Boston,  (a  convenjent  time  before  y''  lecture  begin,)  the  said  Betts 
haue  a  rope  put  about  his  nccke  by  the  executioner,  and  fi-om  the  prison  that 
he  bee  carrjed  to  the  gallows,  there  to  stand  vppon  the  ladder  one  hower,  by 
the  glasse,  w**"  the  end  of  his  rope  throune  ouer  the  gallows ;  2'^.  That  he  be  CoKts  sen- 
brought  backe  to  prison,  and,  imediately  after  the  lecture,  to  be  seuerely  whipt ;  gg^ts  ^^ 
3'y.  That  the  sajd  Betts  shall  pay  all  the  wittnesses  brought  in  against  him  2' 
p  day  for  so  many  dajes  as  they  haue  attended  vppon  the  Court  of  Asistants 
and  the  Gennerall  Coiu-t  vppon  his  trjall;  4'^.  That  he  shall  pay  fiuetecne 
pounds  into  the  countrje  treasury  for  and  towards  the  charges  the  Courts  haue 
binn  at  vppon  his  trjall ;  5'^.  That  the  sajd  Betts  be  bound  to  the  good  be- 
haviour for  one  whole  yeare  in  the  soine  of  twenty  pounds. 

In  ans''  to  the  petioon  of  M''  Symon  Lynde,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  County  Ans'  to  M' 
Court  for  the  county  of  SufFolke  shall,  and  hcereby  are  jmpoiu-ed  to,  give  5"  ^peic 
M"^  Ljiide  just  damages,  (the  verdict  of  the  jury  being  vnvsuall.) 

In  the  case  betweene  the  widdow  Wilson,  of  Braintry,  jjlaintiff,  ag'  Judgment  of 
Thomas  Faxon,  defendant,  about  Joseph  Wilson,  sonne  of  the  sajd  widdow  widdow  Wil- 
Wilson,  being  an  apprentize  w"'  the  sajd  Tho  Faxon,  the  Court,  vppon  a  full 
hearing  what  both  partjes  could  say  in  the  case,  judge  meete,  that  the  sajd 
Joseph  Wilson  shallbe  freed  from  his  sajd  master,  and  be  put  apprentice  to  a 
new  master,  by  the  select  men  of  the  sajd  toune,  and  consent  of  two  magis- 
trates, and  that  the  id  Faxon  have  twenty  shillings  allowed  him,  in  reference 
to  all  damages,  &  that  the  cow  formeidy  restrajned  may  be  releast. 

In  ans'  to  the  propposicbns  from  the  toune  of  Boston,  1*'.  About  measur- 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  19 


sous  case. 


146 


THE    KECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


1653. 

2  June. 

Ans'  to  Boston 
fposicone. 


Ans'  to  Rich: 
Lowles  mo- 
tion, &c. 


Secret  iillow- 
ance  for  tran- 
scribing 5" 
coiiiissioners 
acts  y"  last 
Court. 


Edward  Mitch- 
elson  to  cxecut 
executios  fro 
G.  Court  & 
Court  Asist- 
ants. 

'Coiiiittee  to 
lay  out  Ande- 
ver  highwajes. 


[*133.] 

Capt.  LeQet 
liberty  to 
transport 
pvicons  to 
La  Tour. 
Executioner 
exempt'^  from 
trajngs  & 
watchings,  &c. 


ing  of  boards,  the  Coitrt  judgeth  it  meet  to  the  select  men  of  the  townes  of 
Boston  and  C'harlestoune  to  order  therein,  and  to  appointe  mecte  psons  to  carry 
on  the  same.  To  y  2'^  pposicon,  in  reference  to  the  building  of  a  ponder 
howse  in  Boston,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meet  that  it  shall  be  left  to  the  deputjes 
of  Boston  and  Charles  Toune  to  act  therein  for  the  furtherance  of  the  same, 
and  to  pisent  such  orders  for  the  securing  thereof  as  they  judge  necessary,  to 
the  next  session,  to  be  allowed  and  confirmed.  To  y^  6^^  pposicon,  about  the 
annuall  chojce  of  y''  audito''  and  survejo"^  gcnnerall,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meet 
that  it  be  left  to  the  consideracbu  of  the  next  session  ;  the  rest  of  }'*  pticu- 
lars  being  provided  for  by  orders  already  made,  &  thought  meete  to  be 
past  by. 

Vppon  a  motion  made  to  this  Court  by  Richard  Lowle,  of  Newbery, 
brother  to  Jn"  Lowle,  deceased,  this  Court  doth  order,  and  heereby  give  full 
jjower  to  the  County  Courts,  either  of  Salem  or  Ipsuich,  to  appoint  some 
meete  person  to  receive  the  porcons  of  James  and  Joseph  Lowle,  sonnes  to  the 
s"^  Jn°  Lowle,  the  sajd  Richard  being  very  sickly  and  ill,  and  vncapable  thereby 
to  looke  any  farther  after  the  same,  that  so  it  may  be  improoved  for  theire  best 
advantage. 

The  secretary  and  his  man  having  for  this  months  tjme  and  more  binn 
very  much  implojed  to  write  for  our  coiiiissioners,  both  theire  acts  and  tran- 
scribing the  letters  and  artickles  to  the  Dutch,  &S,  the  Court  doth  judge  it 
meete,  and  orders,  that  the  secretary  be  sattisfied  out  of  the  next  country  rate, 
eight  pence  p  page,  as  the  lawe  provides  in  another  case  ;  and  that  the  seuerall 
proportions  of  the  other  colonjes  be  by  the  auditor  taken  notice  of,  that  it 
maybe  brought  to  account. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  execcution  of  all  judgm*'  issued  by  the  Gennerall 
Court  or  Court  of  Asistants  shall  belong  to  y"  gcnnerall  marshall,  Edward 
Mitchellson. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Richard  Walker,  Left  Thomas  Marshall,  Nicco- 
las  Holt,  and  Richard  Barker,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  lay  out  the  coiiion 
highway  betwixt  Andever  and  Redding,  as  may  be  most  convenjent  for  the 
vse  of  the  countrje,  and  make  theire  retourne  hccrcof  to  the  next  sessions  of 
this  Court. 

*This  Court  doth  graunt  liberty  to  Capt  Jn°  Leuerct,  51'"  James  Oliuer, 
and  Ensigne  Scottou  to  send  forth  a  vessell  of  seventeene  tonnes,  w""  flower, 
pease,  and  such  provicons  as  they  haue  occasion  now  to  send  forth,  to  ]\Iouns'' 
La  Tour. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Thomas  Bell,  the  executioner,  shallbe  allowed  out  of 
the  next  levy  the  soiiie  of  fowerteene  shilHugs,  expended  by  him  for  I'opes  and 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  147 

ladders,  for  the  better  executing  of  his  office,  and  that  henceforth  he  shallbc      16  53. 
exempted  fitom  traynings,  watchings,  and  wardings.  '        ^       ' 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  W™  Thompson,  craning  the  remittment  of  a  fine  .  „ 

of  five  2)ounds  y'^  law  imposeth  on  him,  for  making  a  motion  of  marriage  to  I'liompsons 

.  .  peticon. 

Sarah  Coggan  before  he  had  liberty  so  to  doe  from  hir  frcinds,  the  Court 

judgeth  it  meet  to  abate  him  fiffty  shillings  of  that  fine. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  survejor  gennerall  shall  lend  two  barrells  of  good  15"  g'ted  to  y» 
,-,,,,,,  J,  ,  ,.  su'vejor  to  buy 

powder  to  JM''  l  endleton  tor  present,  to  be  rctoiu-ned  agame  vppon  the  tender  powder  w"'all. 

of  the  soiue  of  thirteene  pounds  nineteene  shillings  and  tenupence;  and 
that  the  fiueteene  pounds  dew  to  the  country  from  Jn"  Betts  be  pajd  to  the  sur- 
vejor gennerall,  to  purchase  powder  w^'all. 

The   Court  thankfully  acknowledging  the  good  service  of  our  present  GoOn's  gra- 
hounored  Gouernor,  in  regard  of  his  vnwearjed  pajnes  and  constant  care  in  the 
discharge  of  the  trust  coiiiitted  to  him  the  last  yeere,  in  the  place  of  Goiln'',  as 
a  testemony  thereof  desires  his  acceptance  of  the  soiiie  of  one  hundred  pounds, 
"which  they  order  to  be  pajd  out  of  the  next  country  rate. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  M"'  Symon  Bradstreete  and  Capt  Thomas  "Wig-  1000  acs  of 
gin,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Elder  Hate   Evill  Nutter  and  Thomas   Canny  shall  j^°  ^°■^^,  ^^ 
lay  out  for  them  one  thowsand  acres  of  land,  vppon  the  great  riuer  of  Ne-  Bradstreet  & 

.  Capt.  Wiggin. 

■witchawannet,  in  such  place  as  they  shall  make  chojce  of,  not  intrenching  on 
any  toune  lands,  pticcular  mens  proprietjes,  or  to  hinder  a  plantacon. 

In  ans''  to  the   peticon   of  the  inhabitants  of   Strawberry  Bancke,  now  Courts  ans'  to 
Portsmouth,  tliis  Court  doth  order  and  declare,  that  the  inhabitants  of  Straw-  Bancke  n'ti- 
bery  Bancke  should  be  sattisfyed  w"'  the  priviledges  graunted  by  the  Court  at  ™'^- 
theire  coming  vnder  this  goflnments  ;   2'^.  That  the  Court  of  Doner  or  Straw- 
bery  Bancke  may  nominate  &  confirme  coiiiissioners  for  the  ending  of  smale 
cawses  vnder  40%  as  in  other ;   3'^.  That  the  sajd  Court  may  confirme  such 
millitary  officers  as  they  shall  present. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  il"'  Samuel  Cole,  of  Boston,  itt  is  ordered,  that  400  acres  of 
Cap?  Symon  Willard  shall  and  heereby  is  impowred  to  lay  out  fowre  hundi'ed  to  U'  Cole. 
acres  of  vpland,  at  Nonacoike,  and  is  in  sattisfaction  of  fifty  pounds  by  the 
sajd  Samuell  Cole,  adventured  in  the  coiiion  stocke  23  yeeres  since. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  M"^  Jn"  Johnson,  survejo''  gennerall,  the  deed  of  Hawiey  deed 

01  SiiIg  coH" 

sale  of  a  parcell  of  lafid  sold  vnto  him  by  Thomas  Hawly  and  Dorothy,  his  f^^^^i  to  Jn» 
■wife,  lying  in  Roxbury,  is  confirmed  to  him,  the  sajd  Jn"  Johnson,  and  his  ''°'^^*°'^'  ^'"- 
he'ues. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Edsall,  craving  remittment  of  y*  fine  Tho:  Edsell 

,,.,,..  ,  ^       fined  20". 

the  luwe  imposeth  on  such  as  give  m  more  voates  then  one,  or  any  voates  lor 

magistrates  where  y°  lawe  prohibitts,  profiessing  that  what  he  did  in  such  a 


148  THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1653.      'W3J  was  throiigh  ignorance  of  the  lawe  only,  the  Court  abates  the  fine  to  twenty 

"^     ~^    shillings. 

^^,„„'  *Iu  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Marblehead,  the  Court  doth 

[133.]  ^  . 

T,      •   T  »       graunt  and  order,  that  M'^  Frauncis  Johnson  shall  be  theire  leftennaut. 

±rancis  Jn^son  o  ' 

!<'''*•  In  ans""  to  the  peticon   of   Elias    Stileman,  desiring    Ijcence   to   drawe 

stiiemans  peti-  '^j^^i  the  Court   referrs   it   to  the  County  Court  at   Salem  to  give  the  pe- 


co. 


ticoner  ans''. 


200  ac's  gted  There  being  a  graunt  formerly  made  of  200  acres  of  land  to  Cap?  W" 

Jeanison,  and  sold  by  him  to  Edmond  Rice,  of  Sudbury,  and  to  be  lajd  out 
by  M'^  Edward  Alen  &  M''  Jn°  Oliuer,  neere  the  bounds  of  Dedham,  the  sajd 
comissiouers  being  dead,  and  the  worke  not  finished,  itt  is  ordered,  on  the  re- 
quest of  the  sajd  M"^  Eice,  that  Capt  Willard  and  Serjant  Sherman  shall  lay 
out  the  sajd  land,  according  to  order,  makeing  theire  retourne  to  the  next 
session  of  Court. 
Allowance  to  Itt  is  by  this  Court  ordered  and  declared,  that  if  any  person  or  persons 

jj.   .  ,  shall  appeare  that  will  engage  sivfficyently  to  builde,  repaier,  and  maintajne 

bridge.  ^\^q  bridge  at  Misticke  at  his  or  theire  propper  costs  and  charges,  it  shall  be 

lawfull,  and  all  and  euery  such  pson  or  psons  so  engaging  are  heereby  author- 
ized, and  haue  full  power,  to  aske,  requier,  and  recouer  of  euery  single  pson 
passing  ouer  the  sajd  bridge  1*  ;  and  for  euery  horse  and  man,  6* ;  for  eueiy 
beast,  2* ;  for  euery  cart,  1' ;  and  this  to  continew  so  long  as  the  bridge  shall 
be  sufficyently  majutajned  as  aforesajd.  • 

Court  agreem'  The  Gennerall   Court,  considering   of  the  proportion  of  pouder  which 

^    <•  "'.  hi"'  accordiuc;  to  the  divicon  of  the  coiuissioners   of  the  Vnited  Colonies  as  be- 

son  for  y«  Mas-  o  J 

sachusetts        longing  to  the  Massachusetts  jurisdiccon,  doe  heereby  order  and  agree  to  haue 

j>porcon  of 

pouder.  and  make  due  sattisfacon  for  the  same,  and  from  this  day  to  stand  to  the  hazard 

thereof,  and  losse  of  it,  if  it  should  so  happen  before  due  pajment  be  made 
and  pajd  to  Edward  Eawson  on  behalf  of  the  colonjes. 
Ans'  to  Ded-  In  ans'  to  the  proposalls  of  the  inhabitants  of  Dedham,  itt  is  ordered,  that 

hamjpposaUs.    jj,  Qlouer,  Captaine  Gookin,  M-^  Jn"  Johnson,  M-^  Edward  Jackson,  and  Lefl 
Roger  Clapp  shall  be  a  coiiiittoe  impowred  to  consider  and  determine  what 
they  shall  judge  necessaiy  to  be  determined  in  relacbn  to  what  is  propounded 
for  and  desired,  making  theire  retourne  to  y^  next  sessions  of  this  Court. 
Ans'  to  M'  In  answer  to  the  petition  of  M''  Deane  "Winthrop,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M'' 

titto°s  etiE  n  ^^^^^  Winthrop,  M"  Elizabeth  "Winthrop,  and  Amos  Richardson  shall  and, 
heereby  are  impowred  as  attorneys  for  Majo'  Steeven  Winthrop,  to  receive 
his  debts  or  rents,  or  to  pay  any  thing  justly  due  from  the  sajd  Steeven  Win- 
throp, or  to  doe  any  other  buisenes  requisite  concerning  the  estate  of  the 
sajd  Stephen,  and  to  prevent  any  damage  that  might  happen  for  want  of  one 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  149 

authorised  therein,  provided  they  give  caution  to  secure  the  country  to  the      10  53. 
next  County  Court.  "       ^        ' 

Jn"  Harts  case,  of  Marblehead,  for  taking  M"'  Gardjners  shipp,  is  refer'd  to  „  " 
the  next  County  Court  at  Salem  to  determine.  f<=r'<i '"  Saiem 

Court. 

The  whole  Coiu't,  being  mett  together,  entring  into  debate  about  fortiffi-  courts  aiiow- 
cations   in   reference  to  the  Castle,  itt  was  voted,  that  two  hundred  pounds  '^i'^'' '"""'is 

fortiffication. 

should  be  allowed  out  of  the  next  country  levy  for  the  building  or  repayring 
of  the  great  battery  at  Castle  Hand,  and  that  twenty  pounds  more  should  be 
allowed  out  of  the  next  countrje  levy  for  the  repayring  of  the  Castle  presently ; 
and  further,  that  one  hundred  pounds  should  be  allowed  to  Salem  out  of  the 
next  levy  towards  theire  fFortiffications. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  sajne  comittee  appointed  by  the  last  Gennerall  Coffiittee  to 
Court  ffor  the  repayring  of  the  battery  shall  take  care  for  the  repayring  of  y*  g^J^ig'  I- 
Castle  and  battery,  and  they  are  heereby  impowred  to  impresse  meete  psons 
and  what  else  they  shall  judge  necessary  for  the  speedjest  accomplishment 
thereof. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Miles  Tearnes  shall  and  is   heereby  impowred,  for      [*13-4.] 
one  whole  yeare,  to  purchase  or  impresse  tenn  doz :  of  goates  or  calves  skins  Miles  Teamea 

power,  &6. 

for  the  making  of  drum  heads  for  the  vse  of  the  country,  he  giving  the  same 
pay  and  sattisfacon  for  them  as  others  doe. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  lawe  for  choosing  of  majors  in  the  countyes  of  Order  for  a 
SufFolke  and  Middlesex  shall  be  put  in  execution  by  the  major  gennerall,  who  s,gi  majors  in 
shall,  according  to  lawe,  send  out  his  warrants  to  the  seuerall  tounes  to  send  ^"*'l'"=  * 

Midlesex. 

in  theke  votes  for  sarjant  majors,  in  the  roome  of  those  that  are  out  of  the 
coimtrje,  w""in  one  month. 

M"^  Bellingham,  M""  Glouer,  and  M''  Hill  are  appointed  w"'  the  secretary  Comittee  to 
to  pvse  the  lawes  that  is   past  this  Court,  comparing  them  w*''  the  originall  i^^gg  ^g^ 
copies. 

Itt  was  ordered,  that  the  servants  of  both  howses,  M''  Phillips  and  Lef? 
Hudsons,  shall  be  allowed  forty  shillings  each  howse  for  theire  attendance  on 
the  Court. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  W"  Arnold  and  other  the  inhabitants  of  Patuxit,  Ans'  to  "W» 
itt  is  ordered,  a  letter,  with  a  protest,  shall  be  sent  from  this  Court  or  the  j„ 
councell  to  and  against   all   such  as   shall  vsurpe  vppon  the  inhabitants   of 
Patuxit,   either    by   challenging    jurisdiccon    oner    them,    or    levying    rates 
vppon  them  ;   and  that  the   inhabitants  of  Patuxit,   (being  w'^'in  our  jm-is- 
diccSn,)  or  any  of  them,  shall  or  may  arest  and  impleade  in  any  of  our  County 
Courts  any  person  of  any  other  jurisdiccon  that  shall  vsurpe  ouer  them,  when  . 
they  shall  fiude  any  of  them,  or  theire  goods,  within  our  jurisdiccon,  where 
they  shall  recouev  full  damage. 


150  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1653.  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  IM"'  Thomas  ]\Iakcpeace  &  Willjam,  his  sonne, 

"*        '  the  Court,  on  pvsall  of  the  indenture,  attachment,  and  the  judgment  of  the 

No  apprentice  Coiiiissioners  Court,  and  the  lawe,  title  Masters  &  Servants,  doe  declare,  that 

liable  to  pay  the  i^roceedings  of  ^M"'  Hutchingson  in  reference  to  Willjam  Makepeace,  the 

m's  debts  but 

by  assignment,  aprentice,  to  be  w^'out  and  against  lawe  ;  and  farther,  that  no  aprentice  or 
servant  is  any  way  Ijable  to  ans'  his  masters  debts,  or  become  servant  to  any 
other  then  his  master,  but  by  assignemeut,  according  to  lawe,  and  that  the 
sajd  aprentice,  being  deserted  by  his  master,  is  thereby  released  from  liis 
ap'ntishifip. 

The   Courte   is    adjourned   to   the    18"»  of  October,    1653,   vulesse  the 
Gouernor  call  one  in  the  meane  tjme. 


[*135.]     *M  a  Gennerall  Court  called  by  the  Gouerno"  and   Councell,  and 
30^"g"=t-  held  at  Boston,  the  30"  of  August,  1653. 


I 


TT  is  ordered,  that  Major  Gennerall  Uaniell  Dennison  shall  supply  the 
place  of  secretary,  in  the  absence  of  the  secretary. 
Itt  is  ordered,  that  this  Court  shall  be  insteed  of  the  Court  that  is  ap- 
pointed to  be  in  October  next. 
To  p^vent  Vppon  information  of  soundry  abuses  and  misdemeanors,  coinitted  by 

$p  -anation  0  gguudry  persons  on  the  Lords  day,  not  only  by  childrens  playing  in  the 
streetes  and  other  places,  but  by  youths,  majds,  and  other  persons,  both 
straungers  and  others,  uncivily  walking  the  streetes  and  feilds,  travailing  from 
tonne  to  tonne,  going  on  shipboard,  frequenting  coiiion  bowses  and  other 
places  to  drincke,  sport,  and  otherwise  to  mispend  that  pretjous  tjme,  which 
things  tend  much  to  the  dishonnor  of  God,  the  reproach  of  religion,  greiving 
the  soules  of  Gods  servants,  and  the  prophanatjon  of  his  holy  Saboath,  the 
sanctifficatjon  whereof  is  sometjmes  put  for  all  dutjes  iiiiedjately  respecting 
the  service  of  God  contejncd  in  the  first  table,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  tliis 
Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  no  children,  youths,  majds,  or  other  per- 
sons shall  transgresse  in  the  like  kiude,  on  pcenaltje  of  being  rej)uted  grcate 
provokers  of  the  high  displeasiu-e  of  Almighty  God,  and  further  incurring 
the  pcenaltje  heereafter  expressed,  namely,  that  the  parents  and  gouerno''s  of 
all  children  about  seven  yeeres  old,  (not  that  wee  aproove  younger  children 
in  evill,)  for  the  first  ofl'ence  in  that  kinde,  vppon  due  proofe  before  any 
magistrate,  toune  coinissioner,  or  selectmen  of  the  toune  where  such  offence 
shallbe  coinitted,  shall  be  admonished ;  for  a  second  offence,  vppon  due  proofe 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  151 


30  August. 


as  aforesajdj  shall  pay  as  a  fine  five  shillings ;  and  for  a  third  offence,  \-ppon  1  6  5  3. 
due  proofe  as  aforcsajd,  tcnne  sliillings ;  and  if  they  shall  againe  offend  in  that 
kinde,  they  shallbe  presented  to  the  County  Court,  who  shall  augment  punnish- 
ment  according  to  tlie  mcrrit  of  the  ffact ;  and  for  all  youths  and  niajds  above 
foivertecne  yeeres  old,  and  all  elder  persons  whatsoeuer,  that  shall  offend  and  be 
convic?  as  aforesajd,  either  for  playing,  vnciuill  walking,  drincking,  travayling 
from  toune  to  toune,  going  on  shipboard,  sportjng,  or  in  any  way  mispending 
that  pretjous  tjme,  shall  for  the  first  offence  be  admonished,  vppon  due  jDroofe 
as  aforesajd ;  for  a  second  offence,  shall  pay  as  a  fine  five  shillings  ;  and  for  a 
third  offence,  tenu  shillings  ;  and  if  any  shall  further  offend  that  way,  they 
shall  be  bound  ouer  to  the  next  County  Court,  who  shall  augment  punnish- 
ment  according  to  the  nature  of  the  offence  ;  and  if  any  be  vnable  or  vnwill- 
ing  to  pay  the  aforesajd  fines,  they  shall  be  whipped  by  the  counstable,  not 
exceeding  five  stripes  for  tenn  shillings  fine  ;  and  this  to  be  vnderstood  of  such 
offences  as  shall  be  coiiiitted  during  the  daylight  of  the  Lords  day.  This  lawe 
is  to  be  transcribed  by  the  counstable  of  each  toune,  and  j^osted  vppon  the 
meeting  howse  doore,  there  to  remajne  the  space  of  one  month  at  least. 

*  Vppon  complajnte  of  soundry  abuses  and  inconvenjencies,  by  occasion      [*136.] 
of  the  libertje  for  selling  beare  at  three  pence  the  quart,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  ,  ^""^  "'g^  '^^ 
Court  and  the  authoritie  thereof,  that  henceforth  no  beere  shall  be  sould  for  l^-'"''  ri^peiiled 

&  2>i  p'  quart 

more  then  twopence  the  quart,  and  that  braunch  of  the   lawe  that  allowes  only  allowed 
beere  to  be  sold  at  three  pence  the  quart  is  heereby  repealed. 

Whereas  the  last  sessions  of  this  Court  j^assed  an  order  concerning  pub-  To  pTent  er 
licke  preaching  w'ithout  allowance,  which  order  the  Court  vnderstands  is  dis-  j^„  ^.g 
satisfactory  to  diners  of  the  inhabitants  whom  the  Court  hath  cawse  to  respect 
and  tender,  although  the  Court  conceaves  the  sajd  order,  rightly  vnderstood, 
to  be  safe  and  much  conducing  to  the  preservation  of  peace  and  truth  amongst 
vs,  yett,  that  all  jealowsies  maybe  remooved,  this  Court  doth  repeale  the  sajd 
order,  ^  and  doth  heereby  enact,  that  enery  person  that  shall  publish  and  -^• 

majutajne  any  hoethrodoxe  and  erronjous  doctrjne  shallbe  Ijable  to  be  qua:s- 
tioned  and  censured  by  the  County  Court  where  he  liveth,  according  to  the 
merrit  of  his  offence. 

Vppon  soundry  complaints  of  the  great  taxatjons  vppon  the  countrje  in  Accompt  of 

anual  ex- 

reference  to  publicke  charges  respecting  the  weighty  occasions  of  this  comon-  pences,  &c. 
wealth,  and  for  sattisfaction  of  the  countrje  therein,  itt  is  ordered  by  this 
Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  M"^  Increase  Nowell,  M"  Edward  Ting, 
and  M'  Joseph  Hills  shall  joyne  with  the  auditor  gennerall  to  examine  and 
take  the  Treasiu'ers  accompts,  who  shall  present  the  same  vnder  theire  hands 
vnto  the  next  session  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  according  to  the  lawe,  page  26, 


152 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Rectifying  of 
appeales,  &£. 


[*137.] 


Grand  jurors 
allowance  at 
County  Courts. 


Impost  on 
strong  waters 
X'  p  hh",  &c. 


in  the  second  booke  ;  and  itt  is  further  ordered  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd, 
that  in  case  of  nonappojntment  as  that  lawe  provides,  that  then  the  Treasurer 
shall  tender  his  aunnall  accompts  vnto  the  Gennerall  Court ;  and  further,  itt  is 
ordered  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  that  the  seuerall  grosse  somes  of  all  the 
incoines,  viz.,  vjjpon  the  annuall  rate  vppon  imposts,  vintners,  entring  of 
accons,  fines,  forfeitures,  &(5,  as  also  of  all  expences,  viz.,  of  all  Courts,  coiiiis- 
sioners,  gratujtjes,  allowances,  pajment  of  debts,  &6,  be  exactly  by  the  auditor 
certefied  vnto  the  Gennerall  Court  annually,  and  expressed  in  all  the  coppies 
of  the  lawes  sent  vnto  the  seuerall  tounes,  made  in  the  first  sessions  of  the 
Court  of  Eleccbn,  whereby  the  true  state  of  things  in  that  respect  may  be  ob- 
vjous  to  all  that  are  concerned  therein. 

For  a  more  cleere  and  isquall  hearing  and  determining  all  matters  of  ap- 
peales,  itt  is  ordered,  and  bee  it  henceforth  enacted,  that  no  pson  that  hath  sate 
as  judge,  or  voted  in  any  inferior  Court  in  that  cawse  he  is  aj^pealed  from,  shall 
haue  any  voate  in  the  superior  Court  appealed  to,  but  the  case  shallbe  there 
determined  by  such  as  are  no  way  ingaged  in  the  same  by  judging  or  voating 
in  the  same  *ffbrmerly,  provided  there  be  more  magistrates  appealed  to  then 
those  that  sate  in  the  Court  ajjpealed  from. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  grand  ju- 
rors at  County  Courts  shallbe  allowed  three  shillings  by  day  out  of  the  fjues 
and  other  j)roffitts  not  disposed  of  by  any  former  order  arising  in  each  Court 
where  they  shall  doe  such  service,  or  by  the  county  if  those  incomes  fall  short. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  euery  pson 
whatsoeuer  that  shall  bring  any  strong  waters  into  any  of  our  harbors,  (except 
it  shall  appeare  by  request  that  they  came  directly  from  England,)  before  he 
lands  any  of  them  shall  first  make  entrje  of  all  and  euery  svich  caske  or  other 
vessell  of  strong  waters  as  he,  or  any  for  or  vnder  him,  shall  put  on  shoare, 
by  a  noate  vnder  his  hand,  deliuered  vnto  the  officer  at  his  dwelling  howse, 
appointed  to  receive  the  customes,  on  pajne  of  forfeitiu-e  of  all  such  strong 
waters  landed  before  such  entrje  made,  wheresoeuer  it  shallbe  found,  the  one 
halfe  to  the  countrje,  the  other  halfe  to  the  officer ;  and  the  merchant,  or  other 
pson,  owner  of  such  strong  waters,  shall,  vppon  the  landing  of  them,  pay  vnto 
the  officer,  in  the  same  coinoditjes  for  all  strong  waters,  after  the  rate  of  tenn 
shillings  p  hogshead  ;  and  itt  is  further  ordered,  that  the  officer  may  further 
doe  in  all  respects  as  neede  shall  requier,  in  the  cxeccution  of  this  lawe,  as  is 
provided  in  the  lawe,  title  Impost,  page  27. 

Whereas  all  marshalls  and  counstables  for  serving  attachments  and  execvi- 
tjons  haue  binn  by  lawe  allowed  as  theire  ffees,  in  all  tounes  not  exceeding 
one  mile,  twelve  pence  for  theire  pajnes  in  serving  attachments,  and  for  execcu- 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  153 

tions  twelve  pence  in  tlic  pound  to  tenn  pounds,  &  sixpence  in  the  pound  to 
thirty  pounds,  &<5,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that 
all  marshalls  and  tounstablcs  throughout  this  iurisdiccon  shall  haue  for  scrv- 

°  •'  Geniicrall 

iug  eucry  attachment  not  exceeding  one  mile  one  shilling  and  three  pence,  m'shalls  ffccs 
.,,,.,  1     •        /T  1  out  of  piiy  al- 

and so  proportjouably  as  the  miles  encrease,  theire  Hees  to  encrease  as  hcereto-  tachment  or 

fore ;   and  all  niar.'-lialls  and  couustables  from  tjmc  to  tjnic  sliall  henceforth  al-  ''^'-■'^"''0">  ^'^ 

low  and  pay  vnto  Edward  Michelsou  three  pence  out  of  euery  fivcteene  pence 

tlicy  rcceave  for  serving  of  attachments  ;  and  further,  also,  shall  allowe  and 

pay  the  sajd  Edward  Michelson  three  pence  out  of  euery  shilling  wliich  they 

or  any  of  them  shall  levy  in  any  part  of  this  jurisdiccon,  by  way  of  fines  or 

execcutions,  which  this  Court  allowes  him  as  a  meete  encouragement  for  his 

service  in  the  place  of  gennerall  marshall ;  and  it  is  further  ordered,  that  the 

said  Edward  Michelson  shall  haue  not  only  y"  sole  bennefitt  of  y"^  arrearcs  due 

to  y^  countrje  from  all  such  as  haue  retajled  strong  waters  w"'out  license,  two 

pence  p  each  quarte,   and  shall  also"  have  the  sole  bennefitt  of  the  custom 

graunted  by  this  Court  of  two  pence  p  each  quart  of  strong  waters  retayled  by 

any  in  this  jurisdiccon,  by  license  or  otherwise,  which  if  any  shall  refuse  to 

*sattisfy  on  his  complajnt,  and  proofe  made  by  him  of  any  strong  waters  re-      [*138.] 

tayled  w""out  license,  the  party  y*  hath  ofiended  shallbe  Ijable  to  pay  as  a 

fine  to  tlie  countrje  five  pounds,  one  halfe  whereof  shallbe  to  the  country,  and 

the  other  halfe  to  the  said  Edward  INIichelson.     And  further,  this  Court  graunt 

the  sajd  Edward  Michelson  the  sole  bennefit  of  the  late  imj)ost  graunted  on 

strong  waters,  to  enjoy  to  his  oune  vse,  and  his  sallerj'  of  tenn  pounds  p  ann 

is  taken  of  during  his  enjoyment  of  the  custome  of  strong  waters ;  and  this 

law  is  to  be  in  force  two  yeares.     And  itt  is  ordered  &  heereby  declared,  that 

he  that  sells  by  license  but  a  gallon  of  strong  water,  or  vnder,  at  any  one  tjme, 

is  a  retayler,  and  Ijable  to  pay  2**  for  euery  quart  so  retayled,  according  to  law, 

title  Inkeepers. 

Whereas  by  a  late  lawe  made  in  October,  1648,  there  was  some  incour-  Law  to  encour- 
agement, both  to  English  and  Indjans,  for  the  dcstruccon  of  woolves,  which  ^oiyggre.  "^ 
hath  binn  found  proffitable  vnto  the  countrje,  but  now  is  expired,  it  is  there-  fifed, 
fore  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  said  lawe  of 
October,  1648,  be  revived,  and  stand  in  force. 

Vppon  informaijon  of  many  inconveuiencjes  and  differences  by  meanes  of  Sciectmens 
deficjent  fences,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Coiu-t  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  i'a'tlfences*'&s" 
selectmen  of  all  tounes  shall  make  wholesome  orders  for  the  repajring  of  all 
fences,  both  gennerall  and  pticcular,  within  theire  seuerall  touneships,  excepting 
farme  fences  of  one  hunch'ed  acres,  and  haue  power  to  impose  fines  vppon  all 
delinquents,  not  exceeding  twenty  shillings  for  one  offence ;  and  if  any  select- 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  20 


30  August. 
Castle. 


154  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  53.     moil  shall  neglect  to  make  such  orders  as  aforesajd  more  then  one  month  after 
the  first  of  the  last  moneth  next,  they  shall  forfeite  five  pounds  to  the  vse  of 
the  toune,  and  so  for  euery  months  defalt  for  after  tjme. 
Comittee  to  re-  The  Court,  taking  the  condition  of  the  Castle  into  theire  consideratjon,  doe 

Cistk  &c  j'^^'^^^  ^^  necessary  that  something  should  be  donne  by  way  of  repayring  the 
same,  and  doe  therefore  order,  that  there  shall  be  a  smale  fort  erected  there, 
the  charge  whereof  shall  not  exceed  three  hundred  pounds,  the  one  halfe  of 
which  shall  be  pajd  out  of  the  next  levy,  and  the  other  halfe  out  of  that  which 
will  be  the  next  yeere  ;  and  for  the  better  carrying  an  end  of  that  worke.  Ma- 
jor Edward  Gibbens,  Major  Robt  Sedjuke,  Cayit  Jn"  Leueratt,  Capt  Humphry 
Atherton,  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  Capt  Frauncis  Norton,  and  M'  John  Johnson 
are  appointed  as  a  coiiiittee,  and  heereby  are  impowred  to  make  composition 
with  any  workemen  for  effecting  thereof,  according  to  theire  best  discreation ; 
and  what  shallbe  by  them  so  donne,  this  Court  will  confirme  and  allow,  pro- 
vided they  exceed  not  the  soiiie  above  mentioned. 
Allowance  to  Tills  Court,  considering  the  many  complajnts  of  the  countrje,  in  respect 

g.'g°  '      of  publicke  charges,  which  they  are  sensible  of,  and   very  willing   to    their 

vttermost  to  remoove,  doe  order  and  enact,  and  bee  it  heereby  ordered  and 
enacted,  that  euery  the  magistrates  who  haue  borne  the  burden  of  that  place 
[*139.]      for  the  space  of  tenn  ycares  *past  shall  henceforth  be  allowed  to  defray  theire 
of  sovern-'^^'^^   oune  expences  at  all  Gennerall  Courts,  Courts  of  Asistants,  and  other  meetings, 
'"'^"'-  as  they  are   magistrates  and  standing  counsell  of  this  coiuoa  wealth,  thirty 

pounds  a  peece  p  annu ;  and  all  other  magistrates  of  lesser  standing,  for  theire 
expenses  as  aforesajd,  twenty  pounds  a  peece  p  annu ;  and  such  magistrates  as 
heereafter  shallbe  called  to  that  service  fiveteene  pounds  a  peece  p  anii,  for  all 
theire  expence,  as  aforesajd ;  and  that  the  Gouerno^  for  the  tjme  being,  from 
yeare  to  yeare,  shallbe  allowed  in  like  manner,  for  himself  and  his  attendants, 
one  hundred  and  twenty  pounds  p  anil ;  and  that  the  secretary  be  allowed  for  his 
pajnes  and  expences  for  the  Gennerall  Court  and  counsell,  fforty  five  pounds 
p  annu;  and  that  all  the  charges  of  the  seuerall  County  Courts,  both  judges, 
jurjes,  and  officers,  shallbe  borne  by  the  actjons  arising  in  each  countje  in  which 
they  are  holden ;  and  that  all  grand  jurymen  be  allowed  for  theire  expences 
three  shillings  a  man  by  day,  and  the  juiy  for  trjall  of  cawses  fewer  shillings 
by  actjon.  And  if,  vpjion  trjall  heereof,  it  shallbe  found  burdensome  to  any 
county,  in  respect  of  the  charges  of  County  Courts,  vppon  complaints  to  this 
Court,  it  may  be  remedjed  by  increase  vppon  actions,  or  otherwise  ;  and  that 
such  tounes  as  have  not  more  then  thirty  freemen  shall  henceforth  be  at 
libertje  for  sending  or  not  sending  deputjes  to  the  Gennerall  Court ;  and  all 
such  tounes  as  shall  send  deputjes  vnto  the  Gennerall  Court  shallbe  the  whole 
charge  of  theire  respective  deputjes.     It  is  further  ordered  by  this  Court,  that 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  155 

licncefoith  the  rate  vppon  the  polle  shallbe  twenty  pence,  and  no  more ;  and      1  G  5  3. 
this  lawe  is  to  take  eflcct  the  20"^  of  this  instant  October,  and  that  tlie  Court  '       ' 

of  Eleccon  be  kept  at  Boston. 

Vppon  observation  of  some  incouvenjencjes  in  seuerall  respects  in  MUitia  regula 
reference  to  the  niihtja,  and  for  the  better  improovement  both  of  the  horse 
and  foote,  and  great  artilliije,  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon,  itt  is  ordered  by  this 
Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  no  coiiiission  officer  of  any  fFoote  com- 
pany shallbe  a  Ijsted  trooper.  2'^'.  That  in  case  of  alarum  euery  trooper  shall 
fitt  himselfo  in  all  resjiccts  for  service,  on  pccnaltje  of  five  pounds,  and  that 
the  troopers  in  each  touuc  shall  duely  attend  such  expeditjons  as  the  comittee 
for  niilitja,  in  tlieire  seuerall  tounes,  shall  require,  vntill  they  shall  otherwise 
be  comanded  by  some  present  order  from  theire  iiiiediate  cheifetajne  or  other 
superior  officer.  3'^.  That  henceforth  all  millers,  boatemen,  and  fishermen, 
vnlesse  such  as  be  constantly  implojed  in  fishing  at  all  ffishing  seasons,  shall 
attend  all  traynings  and  watchings,  as  other  souldjers,  or  make  allowance  to  the 
company  as  theire  cheife  officer,  or  the  cheife  officers  of  the  regiment,  shall 
appointe.  4'-*'.  That  such  ffiirmes  as  haue  twenty  acres  or  vpwards  of  land  in 
tillage,  and  twenty  head  of  great  cattell,  improoved  vppon,  or  belonging  vnto 
such  ffarmes,  whose  mansion  or  dwelling  howse  is  or  shallbe  more  then  fower 
miles  from  *the  place  of  excercising  the  company  to  which  they  belong,  or  that  [*  140.1 
haue  any  ferry  to  passe  ouer,  shall  not  be  called  to  theire  tounes  to  millitary 
watches,  but  shall  watch  and  ward  as  theire  cheife  officers  shall  direct  other- 
wise. 5'y.  That  all  warrants  for  impressing  of  men  for  warre  shall  henceforth  Further  to  rcg- 
be  diiected  to  the  comittee  of  militja  in  such  tounc,  to  execute  the  same  by  the  njjiijj.^  ^^^j 
counstable.  6'^.  That  the  coiiiittee  of  militia  in  Boston  shall  henceforth  be  of 
the  magistrates  residing  in  the  sajd  toune,  the  cheife  officer  of  the  horse,  if 
dwelling  there,  and  the  cheife  officer  of  each  company  of  the  ffoote  w^'in  the 
sajd  toune,  or  the  major  part  of  them.  7'^'.  That  the  ffoote  companjes  may 
henceforth  be  excercised  at  any  tjmes  in  the  yeare,  as  theire  cheife  officers  shall 
appoint,  according  to  lawe.  S'''.  In  respect  of  superioritje  of  coiiianders  and 
companjes,  itt  is  ordered,  that  all  coiiianders  shall  take  place  according  to  the 
senioritje  of  companjes,  as  formerly,  which  on  long  experience  hath  binn  found 
peacefull  and  satisfactory  to  the  souldjers. 

Whereas  the  majors  of  the  seuerall  regiments  are  jnjoyned  by  lawe  to  Majors  liberty 

T     .  .  .  .         .  c         1  •/■   •         tokeepeCourts 

meete  m  theire  respective  regiments  twice  in  euery  yeare,  for  the  rectifying  g,  „ot 
of  such  things  as  are  amisse,  itt  is  heereby  ordered,  that  from  henceforth  each 
major  shallbe  left  to  his  Ubertje  in  that  respect,  and  that  part  of  the  lawe 
wliich  requires  the  same  is  heereby  repealed.  .  ^  speciali 

Court  grted. 

Vppon  the  motion  and  request  of  the  creditors  to  the  iron  works,  this  lo  Sept.,  53. 


15G 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1G53. 

30  August. 
^V;ls  adjurned 
from  y*  14  to  y 
15'"'  of  s'l  Sep- 
tember, 53. 
The  Courte. 


Courts  judg- 
ment in  M" 
Mason  &  M' 
Leaders  case. 


[*141.] 


Kobt.  Pikes 
impeacbm'. 


Court  cloth  graunt  that  they  may  haiic  a  speciall  Court  to  sitt  at  Boston,  vppon 
the  fowerth  day  tlie  next  ■weeke,  to  heare  and  determnic  such  case  or  cases  as 
shallbe  brought  before  them  by  the  sajd  credito'*,  provided  the  comissioners 
for  the  vndertakers  of  the  sajd  works  shall  agree  thereto. 

Vppon  examination  of  the  case  respecting  ^l'^  Ann  Mason  and  M""  Rich 
ard  Leader,  on  a  hearing  of  IM'^  Joseph  Mason  and  ISI'^  Thaddeus  Riddan, 
agents  and  attorneys  for  either  partje,  considering  also  the  late  retourne  of  the 
coiiiittee,  touching  the  extent  of  the  northerly  Ijne  of  thcire  pattent,  doe  fynd 
that  the  lands  clajmed  in  the  right  of  Capt  Jn°  Mason,  and  now  possessed  by 
'M'  Richard  Leader,  or  others  for  or  vnder  him,  together  with  other  the  lands 
pretended  vnto  by  INI"  Ann  Mason,  are  w^'in  this  patent ;  and  that  M"^  Joseph 
Mason,  as  attourney  for  and  on  the  behalfe  of  M"  Ann  Mason,  as  also  most 
of  the  people  there  juhabitting,  haue  voluntarily  submitted  to  the  jurisdiction 
of  gouernmcnt  to  this  colony  of  the  Massachusetts  ;  and  that  some  lands  at 
Newitchaworaicke,  with  the  riuers  there,  was,  by  agreement  of  S''  Ferdinaudo 
Gorges  and  others,  apportioned  vnto  Capt  Jn"  Mason,  and  that  he  also  hath 
right,  by  purchase  of  the  Indjans,  to  some  lands  there,  as  also  by  possession 
and  improovcmeut  by  building  and  otherwise  ;  and  that  Capt  John  Mason 
did  bequeath  vnto  his  wife,  M''^  Ann  Mason,  during  hir  life,  all  lands  & 
hseredlttaments  not  otherwise  pticculerly  disposed  of  by  his  will ;  *and  that 
the  lands  in  quEcstion  betwixt  INI''^  Ann  Mason  and  M"'  Leader  are  not  pticcu- 
larly  disposed  of  by  Capt  Jn°  Mason,  or  otherwise  then  they  are  in  the  gen- 
nerall  bequeath  in  the  will  given  to  hir  during  hir  life,  and  that  the  id  lands 
possessed  by  M""  Leader,  as  aforesajd,  are  pte  of  the  lands  disposed  to  the  sajd 
]\I''*  Ann  IMason  for  terme  of  hir  life  ;  and  doe  therefore  judge  that  M'  Leader 
hath  vnjustly  entered  vppon  and  dispossessed  M"  Anne  Mason  of  that  pt  of 
the  riuer,  and  of  some  lands  where  he  hath  erected  a  sawcmill,  in  his  oune 
wrong,  and  orders,  that  a  quantitje  of  land,  with  priviledge  of  the  riuer,  at 
Newitchawannicke,  pportionable  to  Capt  Jn°  Masons  disbursments,  be  lajd 
out  by  order  of  this  Court  to  the  vse  of  ]\I''^  Ann  Mason  and  other  the  heires 
of  Capt  Jn°  Mason. 

And  the  Court  graunts  the  bill  of  costs,  presented  by  JNP  Joseph  Mason, 
of  sixe  pounds  tenn  shillings  and  fower  pence,  ag'  M"'  Richard  Leader. 

The  Court  being  informed,  that,  at  the  publishing  of  the  last  Court  orders 
at  Salisbury,  Lef  I  Rot)t  Pike  demanded  if  that  lawe  which  was  made  to  rcstrajne 
ynfitt  psons  from  constant  preaching,  &6,  whither  that  lawe  was  in  fforce  after 
the  next  Gennerall  Court,  to  which  ans'  being  made  that  the  Court  had  de- 
clared theire  minde  therein,  on  which  he  repljed  that  such  persons  as  did  act  in 
making  that  lawe  did  breaks  theire  oath  to  the  countrey,  or  acted  contrary 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  157 

expressing  the  fFreemans  oathj  for,  sajd  he,  it  is  against  the  libertje  of  the      1  G.^o. 
countrev,  both  ccleasiasticall  and  civill,  and  that  he  stood  there  ready  to  make  it    '       ■"        ' 
good ;  and  farther  sajd  diners  or  seuerall  churches  had  called  theire  members 
to  accompt  which  did  act  in  that  lawe  making,  and  that   some  places  Avere 
about  to  shew  theire  minds  to  the  Gennerall  Court  about  it. 

By  Sam  Winsley,  Sam  Fellowes,  Willjam  Buswell. 

I  doe  very  well  remember  that  L :  Pike  spake  words  to  that  effect,  as  is 
above  specified,  p  mc,  Tlio  Bradbiuy. 

The   Comt   doth  order,  that   Left   Roht  Pike  should  be  sent   for  w""  His  triall. 
speede  to  answer  such  things  as  are  lajd  to  his  charge. 

lie  was  sent  for  by  attachment  accordingly,  and  appeared  before  the  7  September. 
Court,  7"^  September,  1653.  The  Court,  on  a  full  hearing  of  the  case  about 
Leift  Eott  Pike,  and  all  the  evidences  that  haue  testified  in  the  case,  doe 
judge  that  he  is  guilty  of  defamcing  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  and  doe  therefore 
order,  that  the  isd  Roht  Pike  shallbe  disfranchised,  and  disabled  to  beare  any  His  sentence. 
publicke  office  in  tonne  or  coiiionwealth,  and  from  pleading  any  case  except 
his  ouiie  in  any  Court ;  and  further,  that  he  be  bound  to  the  good  behaviour 
during  the  Courts  pleasiu'c,  and  be  fined  the  soinc  of  twenty  marks  to  the 
country.  Eolit  Pike  accordingly  acknowledged  himself  bound  in  tenn  pounds 
to  the  Treasurer,  'M.'^  Richard  Russell,  on  this  condicon  —  that  he  will  be  of 
good  abearing  till  the  next  Court  of  Asistants. 

This  Court  taking  into  consideration  that  Major  Edward  Gibbons  (of 
whose  fidellitje  and  serviceableness  this  coiiionwealth  haue  niannifold  experi- 
ence) hath  a  very  considerable  soiiie  of  money  due  vnto  him  from  the  French 
in  the  easterne  pts,  who,  by  the  reason  of  the  prohibitjon  of  trade,  bearing  date 
the  18th  of  May,  1653,  *is  cutt  of  from  going  forth  to  gett  in  the  sajd  estate,      [*143.] 
therefore  this  Court  doth  hereby  give  libertje  to  the  sajd  Major  Edward  Gib- 
bons, by  himself  or  his  assignes,  to  goe  w"*  any  vessell  or  vessells  to  the  sajd  Major  Gibbons 
French  w"'  provissions  for  trade,  and  not  otherwise,  whereby  he  may  endeavor  .^.th ,0  F,ench 
the  getting  in  his  sajd  debt,  notw*''standing  the  sajd  phibition  of  trade  w*  **-■• 
the  sajd  French,  which  is  still  contjnewed,  except  by  this  libertje  to  the  sajd 
jNIajor  Edward  Gibbons  ;  and  this  order  to  be  in  force  during  the  pleasxu'e  of 
this  Court. 

The  retourne  of  the  coiiiissioners,  who,  vppon  the  coiiilssion  graunted  by  Comission" 
the  Gennerall  Court,  bearing  date  the  7"'  of  June,  1653,  viz.,  Richard  Bel- 
lingham,  EscJ',  Dep'  GoQ,  Cap?  Thomas  Wiggins,  Daniell  Dennison,  Sar' 
Miijo''  Gen",  Edward  Rawson,  Secret,  and  M'  Brjan  Pendleton,  who,  in  order 
to  theire  coiiiission,  repaired  to  Wells,  and  sent  out  suiiions  to  the  inhabitants 
of  Wells,  Saco,  and  Cape  Porpus  to  appeai-e  before  them  the  ■1"'  of  July,  1653.    . 


158  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  53.  Att  Wells,  4'''of  July,  1653,  at  M''  Emersons  howse,  tlie  coiiiissioTiers 

'  ''  '  above  meiicoiiecl,  by  virtue  of  tlicire  couiission,  held  and  kejjt  Court  there, 
aud  cawscd  the  inhabitants  of  "Wells,  by  name  pticcularly,  to  be  called,  accord- 
ing to  thcire  suiuons  ;  and  those  whose  names  are  hereunder  written  made 
theire  appearances,  and  acknowledged  themselves  subject  to  the  gouernment 
of  the  Massachusetts,  as  wittnes  theire  hands,  this  4""  July,  1653.  Joseph 
Emerson,  Ezek :  Knight,  Jn"  Gooch,  Joseph  Boules,  Jn°than  Thing,  John  I 
Barret,  Scii.  After  theire  subjection,  the  comissioners  judged  it  meete  to 
graunt  them  to  be  freemen,  and  accordingly  administered  the  oath  of  freemen 
to  them. 
Counstabie  of  And   for  the  better  effecting    the   ends    of    theire   coinission,    they  ap- 

Wells. 

pointed  Jonathan  Thing  to  be  counstabie  there  for  one  whole  yeere,  and  gaue 
him  the  counstablcs  oath  accordingly. 

And  whilst  the  names  of    the    inhabitants    of  Wells  wef  calling  ouer, 
Willjam  Wardell,  one  of  the  inhabitants  there,  coiiiing  by,  was  called  to  come 
in  and  answer  to  his  name,  which  he  refused,  and  contemptuously  turned  his 
backe  on  the  Court  ;  for  w"''  contempt  the  Court  graunted  out  a  warrant  to 
the  counstabie  to  fetch  the  sajd  W™  Wardell  before  them  to  ans"'  his  contempt, 
■Wardells  con-    and    SO  adjourned  the   Court  to  M'^  P^zekiell  Knights  ;  to  which  place   the 
counstabie  brought  the  sajd  Wardell,  the  rest  of  the  inhabitants  of  Wells  ac- 
companying him  ;  the  Court  demaunding  a  reason  of  the  sajd  Wardell  for  his 
contemptuous  behaviour,  who  excused  himself  that  his  intent  was  not  to  con- 
temne  the  Court,  but  rather  to  endeavor  to  get  the  rest  of  the  inhabitants  of 
Wells  that  had  not  appeared  to  come  in  and  make  theire  appearances,  the 
Court,  at  the  request  of  the  inhabitants,  who  pmised  the  said  Wardell  should 
be   forth  coming  the  next  day,  dismist  the  sajd  Wardell,  and  adjourned  the 
July  5,  53.     Court  till  the  next  day  at  eight  of  y"  clocke.     At  which  time  the  Comt  mett 
againe,  and  the  inhabitants  of  Wells  were  called,  according  to  theire  suilions, 
and  appearing  did  subject  themselves  as  ffoli  :  Wee,  whose  names  are  heere- 
Inhabitants  of  vuder  Written,  inhabitants  of  Wells,  doe  heereby  freely  acknowledge  ourselves 
Wels  subjec-     g^^^ijjgct  to  the  gouernment  of  y"  Massachusetts,  as  wittnes  our  hands,  this  5"^ 

tion.  JO 

of  July,  1653.  Henry  Boade,  Jn"  Wadly,  Edmond  Litlcfeild,  Jn°  Saunders, 
Jn°  White,  Jn°  Bush,  Robt  Wadly,  Fraimcis  Litlefeild,  Seii,  AY"  Wardell, 
Samuel  Austin,  W""  Hamans,  Jn°  Wakefeild,  Tho  Milles,  Antho  Litlcfeild, 
Jn"  Barrett,  Jun,  Tho  Litlefeild,  Frauucis  Litlefeild,  Juil,  Nicho  Cole,  W"  Cole. 
vv  d  1  di  '^^^'^  Court,  at  the  request  of  these  inhabitants,  accepted  the  submission  of  W"" 
mission.  Wardell ;  and  to  these  above  mcnconcd,  also,  the  coiuissioncrs  graunted  they 

should  be  freemen,  and  in  open  Court  gave  them  the  freemans  oath.     And 
further,  whereas  the  toinie  of  Wells  hath  aocknowledgcd  themselves  subject 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    liAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  159 

to  the  ;^oQiimcut  of  the  ^Massachusetts  Bay  m  New  England,  as  by  theire      1G53. 
subscriptions  may  appeaic,  —  ^       ' 

*Wce,  the  comissioncrs  of  the  Gennerall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts  for      L ,  ,^.' 
the  setling  of  goucrnment  amongst  them  and  the  rest  w"'in  the  bounds  of  their  priviiod'cs 
charter  northerly  to  the  full  and  just  extent  of  theire  line,  haue  thought  meete  g""' t"  iniiabit 

ants  of  Wells. 

and  doc  actually  graunt,  — 

1.  That  Wells  shall  be  a  touneship  by  itselfe,  and  ahvajes  shallbe  a 
part  of  Yorkshire,  and  shall  enjoy  j^rotectlon,  tequall  acts  of  fauor,  and  justice 
with  the  rest  of  the  people  jnhabitting  on  the  south  side  of  the  Riuer  of  Pis- 
catque,  w'^'in  the  limitts  of  our  jurisdicction,  and  enjoy  the  privilcdges  of  a 
toune,  as  others  of  the  jurisdiccoa  haue  and  doe  enjoy,  w""  all  other  liber- 
tjes  and  priviledges  to  other  inhabitants  in  our  jurisdiccon. 

2.  That  euery  inhabitant  shall  haue  and  enjoy  all  theire  just  proprietjes, 
titles,  and  interests  in  the  howses  and  lauds  which  they  doe  possesse,  whither 
by  graunt  of  the  toune  possession  or  of  the  foi-mer  Gennerall  Courts. 

3.  That  all  the  ^sent  inhabitants  of  Wells  shall  be  fi-eemen  of  the  coun- 
trje,  and,  hauing  taken  the  oath  of  freemen,  shall  haue  libertje  to  give  theire 
voates  for  the  election  of  the  Gouerno"',  Asistants,  and  other  gennerall  officers 
of  y"  countrje. 

4.  That  the  sajd  toune  of  Wells  shall  haue  three  men,  approoved  by  the  3  coSiissioners 

r^  j~i  r  11  1  1  ^o  ^^^  smale 

County  Court  from  yeere  to  yecre,  to  end  smale  cawses,  as  other  the  toune-  (.^^s^s  ikv. 
shipps  in  tlie  jurisdiccon  hath,  where  no  magistrate  is,  according  to  lawe ;  and 
for  this  present  yeere  M''  Henry  Boade,  M'  Thomas  Wheelewright,  and  M'' 
Ezekiell  Knight  are  appointed  and  authorized  coiiiissioners  to  end  smale 
cawses  vndcr  forty  shillings,  according  to  lawe.  And  further,  these  comis- 
sioners,  or  any  two  of  them,  are  and  shallbe  impowred  and  invested  with  full 
power  and  authoritje  as  magistrates  to  keepe  the  peace,  and  in  all  civill  cawses 
to  graunt  attachments  and  executions,  if  neede  require.  Any  of  the  sajd 
coinissioners  haue  power  to  examine  offenders,  to  cofnitt  to  prison,  vnlesse  bajle 
be  given  according  to  lawe  ;  and  when  these,  or  any  of  these,  shall  judge  neede- 
full,  they  shall  haue  jjower  to  binde  offenders  to  the  peace  or  good  behaviour : 
also  any  of  these  coinissioners  haue  power  to  administer  oathes  according  to 
lawe  ;  also,  marrjage  shallbe  solemnized  by  any  of  the  coinissioners  according 
to  lawe. 

Itt  is  further  heereby  ordered  and  graunted,  that  for  this  present  yeere.  Selectmen  for 
M'  Hemy  Boad,  M'  Thomas  Wheelewright,  M''  Ezekiell  Knight,  Jn"  Wadly,  '^^''"'• 
and  Jn"  Gooch  shallbe  the  selectmen  to  order  the  prudentiall  affaires  of  the 
tonne  of  Wells  for  this  yeere. 


160  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1653.  M""  Heiuy  Eoad,  M"'  Thomas  Wheelewright,  and  M"^  Ezekiell  Knight 

'*  tooke  theire  respective  oathes  as  commissioners  or  associates  vse  to  doe. 

Inhabitants  of  Lastly,  it  is  graunted,  that  the  inhabitants  of  Wells  shall  be  from  tjme  to 

Wells  to  beare  ^j,jjg  exempted  from  all  publickc  rates,  and  that  they  shall  alwajes  bearc  theire 

their  ouue 

charges,  &c.      ouno  chai-gcs  of  the  Covu-ts,  &(3,  arising  from  amongst  themselves.      M'^  Joscjih 
Clarke  of  y       Bowles    was    appointed    clarke    of    the    writts    to    graunt    warrants,    attach- 

ments,  &6. 
Grand  jury-  ]\'P  Ezskiell  Knight  is  appointed  to  be  a  grand  juryman  for  the  toune  of 

Wells  for  one  yeere,  and  tooke  his  oath  accordingly. 
Morg.  Howell  The  cawse  betweene  Morgan  Howell  and  Jn°  Baker  is  contjnewed  and 

nci;on  ag*  Jn"  /»j  ii  'iii  r-t  /^  --i^ii. 

Baker  res^  toy"  I'eierrea,  to  be  aetermmecl  by  the  next  County  Court  in  i  orkshire. 
County  Court,  j^o  Baker  did  acknowledge  himselfe  bound  in  twenty  pounds  to  llichard 

Russell,  gent.  Treasurer  of  the  Massachusetts  jurisdiccon,  on  this  condicon  — 
that  he  shall  appeare  before  the  next  County  Coiut  in  Yorkshire  to  ans'"  y''  sajd 
accon  or  complaint  of  INIorgan  Howell. 
[  144.]  *Seuerall   artickles  were   exhibitted  against   Jn°  Baker   for  abusive  and 

"  •*^'  "  '  opprobious  speches  vttered  by  him  against  the  ministers  &  ministrje,  and  for 
vpholding  private  meetings  and  projihecying,  to  the  hinderance  and  disturbance 
of  jjublicke  assemblings,  &d,  some  of  which  being  prooved  against  liim,  he 
tendered  voluntarily  to  desist  from  pphecying  publickly  any  more.  The  Court 
proceeded  to  censure  him  to  be  bound  to  his  good  behaviour,  and  forbad  him 
any  more  publickly  to  p''ach  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon. 

Jn°  Baker  did  accordingly  acknowledge  himself  bound  in  twenty  pounds  to 
M""  Richard  Russell,  Treasurer  of  the  Massachusetts,  on  this  condicon  —  that 
he  "will  be  of  good  behaviour  betweene  this  and  the  next  County  Court,  and 
make  his  ajipearance  at  the  sajd  Court,  if  he  be  •w^'Hn  this  jurisdiccon. 
Differences  in  Wee,  the  Commissioners  of  the  Massachusetts  for  setling  the  gouernment 

atCapePorpus  ^'-   ^V^^Us,   Cape   Porpus,  and    Saco,  being   inform.ed  of   seuerall   differences 
&  Saco.  amongst  the  inhabitants  of  Wells,  which  were  principally  occasioned  (as  was 

professed  in  the  Court)  by  those  that  called  thcmselucs  the  church  there, 
which  differences  wee  Avere  very  desirows  to  compose,  and  therefore  were  will- 
ing to  be  informed  of  the  proceedings  of  those  persons,  and  the  successe  of 
theire  church  estate,  after  wee  had  heard  Avhat  both  partjes  could  say,  w"' 
the  relatjon  of  M"^  Boad,  Edmond  Littlcfcild,  and  A\'illjam  Wardell,  wee  were 
ffully  sattisfied  that  theire  cliurch  relation  was  dissolved,  wherevppon  wee  ad- 
vised them  to  desist  from  further  disturbance  of  the  place  by  asserting  theire 
pretended  church  relatjon,  and  to  apply  themselues  for  the  future  to  some 
other  course,  which  might  conduce  more  to  the  peace  and  setlement  of  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  161 

place,  wliicli  if  they  shall  neglect  to  doe,  and  shall  contjnew  theire  vn- 
grounded  assertjon  of  theire  church  relatjon,  wee  professe  ourselues  bound  to 
beare  wittnes  against  them  for  endaingering  the  disturbance  of  the  peace  and 
■welfare  of  those  people  vnto  whom  (wee  haue  cause  to  hope  thro  the  blessing 
of  God)  our  endeavors  for  theire  good  will  not  proove  successelesse,  and  doe 
therefore  earnestly  desire  they  may  not  be  rendered  fruitelesse  by  those 
especially  who  professe  themselues,  before  others,  to  be  the  children  of 
peace. 

The  Court  also  proceeded  to  make  this  protestacon,  which  was  by  the 
mai-shall  publickly  publisht. 

Whereas  wee  haue  declared  the  right  of  the  Massachusetts  gouernment 
to  the  tounes  of  Wells,  Cape  Porpus,  and  Saco,  and  the  inhabitants  thereof,  be- 
ing suinoned,  did  appeare  before  vs  at  Wells,  on  this  5""  of  Jidy,  1653,  and 
acknowledged  themselues  subject  therevnto,  and  tooke  the  oath  of  freemen 
and  fidellitje  to  the  sajd  gouernment,  which  by  vs  theire  comissioners 
haue  appointed  and  setled  a  gouernment  ouer  them.  Wee  doe  therefore 
heereby  protest  against  all  persons  whatsoeuer,  that  shall  challenge  jurisdic- 
con  or  excercise  any  act  of  authoritje  ouer  them,  or  ouer  any  other  psons  to 
the  northward  inhabitting  within  the  Ijmitts  of  our  patentts,  which  doth  ex- 
tend to  the  lattitude  43  degrees  43  minuits  &  y  of  northerly  lattitude,  but 
what  shall  be  derived  from  vs  the  commissioners,  or  the  Generall  Court  of 
the  Massachusetts.  Giuen  vnder  our  hands,  at  Wells,  in  the  county  of  Yorke, 
6"^  of  July,  1653,  &  signed, 

RICHARD   BELLINGHAM, 
THOMAS   WIGGIN, 
DANIELL  DENNISON, 
EDUARD   RAWSON, 
BRIAN   PENDLETON. 

*Itt  was  ordered  also,  that  the  select  men  of  the  toune  of  Wells  shall,      [*  145.1 
and  are  heereby  impoured  to  appointe  a  meete  pson  to  keepe  an  ordjnary  there 
for  entertajnment  of  straungers. 

Jn"  Saimders  &  Jonathan  Thing,  as  serjants,  are  appointed  to  excercise 
the  souldjery  there. 

Att  a  Courte  held  at  Wells  by  the  aboue  mentjoned   comissioners  the  S"" 

July,  1653. 

The  inhabitants  of  Saco,  being  by  name  pticularly  called,  made  theii-e  ap- 
pearances according  to  theire  sumons,  and  those  whose  names  are  herevnder 

VOL.    IV. PAKT    I.  21 


162  THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1653.      written  ackno-v^ledged  themselves  subject  to  the  gouerniuent  of  the  Massa 

*"     ''    "^    chusetts,  as  wittnes  theiie  hands,  this  5""  of  July,  1653. 
7  September. 

THOMAS   WILLJAMS,  ROBERT   BOOTH, 

WILLJAM  SCADLOCKE,  RICHARD   COWMAN, 

CHRISTOPHER   HOBBS,  RALFE   TRISTRAM, 

THOMAS  READING,  GEORGE   BARLOW, 

RICHARD   HITCHCOCKE,  JN°  WEST, 

JAMES   GIBBINS,  PETER  HILL, 

THOMAS   ROGERS,  HENRY  WADDOCKE, 

PHILLIP   HINCKSON,  THOMAS   HALE. 

Saeo.  The  coinissioners  judged  it  meete  to  grauut  them  to  be  freemen,  and  ac- 

cordingly gaue  them  the  freemans  oath,  which  they  tooke  in  open  Courte. 

And  whereas  the  inhabitants  of  Saco  hath  acknowledged  themselues  sub- 
ject to  the  gouernment  of  the  INIassachusetts  Bay  in  New  England,  as  by 
theire  subscriptions  may  appeare,  wee,  the  coiuissioners  of  the  Genncrall 
Court  of  the  Massachusetts,  for  the  sctling  of  gouernment  amongst  them 
and  the  rest  w">in  the  bounds  of  theire  charter  northerly,  to  the  full  and  just 
extent  of  theire  Ijne,  haue  thought  meete,  and  doe  actually  graiint,  — 

1.  That  Saco  shall  be  a  touncship  by  itselfe,  and  alwajes  shallbe  a  parte 
of  Yorkeshire,  and  shall  enjoy  jjrotcction,  a?quall  acts  of  fauor  and  justice 
with  the  rest  of  the  people  inhabitting  on  the  south  side  of  the  Riuer  of  Piscat- 
aque,  or  any  other  w"'in  the  Ijmitts  of  our  jurisdicobn,  and  enjoy  the  privi- 
ledges  of  a  tonne,  as  others  of  the  jurisdiccou  haue  and  doe  enjoy,  w"'all 
other  libertjes  and  priviledges  to  other  inhabitants  in  our  jurisdiccou. 

2.  That  euery  inhabitant  shall  haue  and  enjoy  all  theire  just  proprietjes, 
titles,  and  interests  in  the  howses  and  lands  which  they  doe  possesse,  whither 
by  graunt  of  the  toune  jjossession  or  of  the  former  Gennerall  Courts. 

3.  That  all  the  present  inhabitants  of  Saco  shall  be  freemen  of  the  coun- 
trje,  and  having  taken  the  oath  of  freemen,  shall  haue  libertje  to  giue  theire 
votes  for  the  election  of  the  Gouernor,  Asistants,  and  other  gennerall  officers 
of  the  countrje. 

4.  That  the  sajd  toune  shall  haue  three  men  approoved  by  the  County 
Courte,  from  yeere  to  yeere,  to  end  smale  cawses,  as  other  the  touneshipps  in 
the  jurisdiccon  hath  where  no  magistrate  is,  according  to  lawe.  And  for  this 
]psent  yeare  M'  Thomas  Willjams,  Robert  Booth,  and  Jn°  West  are  appointed 
and  authorized  to  end  all  smale  causes  vnder  forty  shillings,  according  to  lawe  ; 
and  farther,  these  coinissioners,  or  any  two  of  them,  are  and  shallbe  impowred 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  103 


7  Septembei: 


and  Invested  with  full  power  and  authoritje,  as  a  magistrates,  to  kecpc  the  1  G  5  3. 
peace,  and  in  all  ciuill  cawses  to  graunt •attachments  and  executions,  if  neede 
require.  Any  of  the  sajd  coinissioners  haue  power  to  examine  offcndors,  to 
coiiiitt  to  prison,  vnlcsse  bajle  be  given  according  to  lawe.  And  when  theise, 
or  any  of  theise,  shall  judge  needefull,  they  shall  haue  power  to  bjnde  offenders 
to  the  peace  *or  good  behavior.  Also  any  of  theise  coinissioners  haue  power  f*  146.1 
to  administer  oathes  according  to  lawe.  Also  marrjage  shallbe  solemnized  by 
any  of  the  coinissioners,  according  to  lawe. 

Itt  is  further  hecreby  ordered  and  graunted,  that  for  this  present  yeere 
M"'  Thomas  Willjams,  Robert  Booth,  and  Jn°  West  shallbe  the  selectmen  to 
order  the  prudcntjall  affaires  of  the  toune  of  Saco  for  this  yeere  ;  and  they  took 
thelre  respective  oathes  as  coinissioners  or  associates  vse  to  doe. 

Lastly,  itt  is  graunted,  that  the  inhabitants  of  Saco  shallbe,  from  tjme  to 
tjme,  exempted  from  all  publicke  rates,  and  that  they  shall  alwajes  beare  theire 
oune  charges  of  the  Courts,  &(5,  arising  from  amongst  themselues. 

Ralph  Trustrum  was  appointed  counstable  there,  and  tooke  his  oath. 

W™  Scadlocke  was  appointed  clarke  of  the  writts  there,  and  also  grand- 
jiuyman  for  this  yeere,  and  tooke  his  oath.  Richard  Hitchcocke  was  appointed 
and  authorized  as  a  sarjant,  to  excercise  the  souldjery  at  Saco. 

The  coinissioners  being  informed  that  John  Smith,  of  Saco,  is  necessarily 
detajned  from  coming  to  j'eild  subjection  to  this  gouernment,  and  that  it  is  his 
desire  to  subject  himselfe  to  this  gouernment,  they  doe  graimt  that  on  his 
acknowledgment  of  subjection  to  this  gouernment,  any  two  of  the  coiiiissioners 
at  Saco  may  and  hereby  haue  libertje  to  giue  him  the  oath  of  a  freeman. 

The  like  libertje,  on  the  like  termes,  is  graunted  to  the  coinissioners  of 
"Wells  to  administer  the  like  oath  to  Richard  Ball,  Richard  Moore,  Jn°  Elson, 
Arthur  Wormestall,  and  Edward  Clarke. 

The  coiiiissioners  being  informed  that  Saco  is  destitute  of  a  good  minister, 
which  is  much  desired,  that  all  due  care  be  taken  to  attajne  the  same,  and  in  the 
meane  tjme  that  theire  peace  maybe  preserved,  they  doe  declare  and  order, 
that  Robert  Booth  shall  haue  libertje  to  excercise  his  guifts  for  the  aedefEcatjon 
of  the  people  there.  Seuerall  of  the  inhabitants  complayning  that  George 
Barlow  is  a  disturbance  to  the  place,  the  coinissioners,  at  theire  request, 
thought  it  meete  to  forbid  the  sajd  George  Barlowe  any  more  publicquely 
to  preach  or  pphecy  there,  vnder  the  pcenalty  of  tenn  pounds  for  euery 
offence. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Inhabitants  of  Wells,  Saco,  and  Cape  Porpus  shall 
make  sufficjent  highwajes  within  theire  toimes,  from  howse  to  howse,  cleere 
and  fitt  for  foote  and  caite,  before  the  next  County  Comt,  vnder  the  pocnalty 


7  September. 


164  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  53.  of  tenn  pounds  for  euery  tonnes  defect  in  this  particcular,  and  that  they  lay 
out  a  sufficjent  highway  for  horse  and  foote  betweene  tonne  and  tonne,  witliin 
that  tjme. 

At  a  Court  held  at  Wells,  5"^  July,  1653. 

The  inhabitants  of  Cape  Porpus  was  called,  and  made  theire  appearances 
according  to  theire  sumons,  and  acknowledged  themselves  subject  to  the 
gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts,  as  followeth  :  — 

Wee,  whose  names  are  vnder  written,  doe  acknowledge  ourselves  subject 
to  the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts,  as  wittnes  our  hands. 

MORGAN   HOWELL, 
CHRISTOPHER   SPURRELL, 
THOMAS   WARNER, 
GRIFFIN   MOUNTAGUE, 
JOHN   BAKER, 
W"   RENOLLS, 
STEPHEN   BATSONS, 
GREGORY   JEOFFERJES, 
PETER    TURBAT, 
JN°   COLE, 
SYMON   TROTT, 
AMBROS   BURY. 

[*  147.1  *To  these  aboue  mencSned  also  the  coinissioners  graunted  they  should  be 

ffreemen,  and  in  open  Court  gaue  them  the  freenians  oath.  And  further : 
whereas  the  tonne  of  Cape  Porpus  hath  acknowledged  themselves  subject  to 
the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts  Bay  in  New  England,  as  by  theii-e  sub- 
scriptions may  appeare,  wee,  the  comissioners  of  the  Gennerall  Court  of  the 
Massachusetts  for  the  setling  of  gouernment  amongst  them,  and  the  rest  w"'in 
the  bounds  of  theire  charter,  northerly,  to  the  full  and  just  extent  of  theire 
Ijne,  haue  thought  meete  and  doe  actually  grauut,  — 

1.  That  Cape  Porpus  shallbe  a  touneship  by  itselfe,  and  alwajes  shallbe 
a  part  of  Yorkshire,  and  shall  enjoy  seqnall  protectjon,  acts  of  fauor  and 
justice  with  the  rest  of  the  people  inhabitting  on  the  southside  of  the  Riuer 
Piscataque,  or  any  other  within  the  Ijmitts  of  our  jiuisdiccon,  and  enjoy  the 
priuiledges  of  a  toune,  as  others  of  the  jurisdiccon  haue  and  doe  enjoy,  w'^aU 
other  Hbertjes  and  prlviledges  graunted  to  other  inhabitants  in  our  juris- 
diccon. 

3.  That  euery  inhabitant  shall  haue  and  enjoy  all  theire  just  proprietjes. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  165 

titles,  and  interests  in  the  howses  and  lands  which  they  doe  possess,  whither 
by  graunt  of  the  touue  possession  or  of  the  former  Geunerall  Coiuts. 

3.  That  all  the  present  inhabitants  of  Cape  Porpus  shall  be  freemen  of 
the  countrje,  and  having  taken  the  oath  of  freemen,  shall  haue  libertje  to  giue 
theire  votes  for  the  election  of  the  Gouerno'",  Asistants,  and  other  geimerall 
officers  of  the  countrje. 

Morgan  Houell,  of  Cape  Porpus,  did  acknowledge  himself  bound  in  fiffty 
pounds  to  the  Treasurer  of  the  countrje,  on  this  condicon  —  that  he  will 
psecute  his  accon  against  Ju''  Baker  at  the  next  County  Court  to  be  held  at 
Yorke. 

Griffon  RIonntague  was  chosen  and  sworne  counstable  there.  Gregory 
Jeoffcryes  was  chosen  grand  juryman  there  for  one  yeare,  and  tooke  his  oath 
accordingly.  Capt  Nicholas  Shapleigh  was  chosen  Treasui'er  for  the  county 
of  Yorkcj  &  is  allowed. 

Signed, 

EI:   BELLINGHAM,  Dep' GoQ, 
DANJELL   DENNISON, 
EDWAKD   RAWSON. 

The  Court,  having  vejwed  this  retourne  of  the  comissioners  that  went  to 
Wells,  Saco,  and  Cape  Porpus,  doe  approove  thereof,  provided  that  the  county 
of  Yorke  beare  theire  pportjon  of  charge  fpquall  to  and  w""  ourselues,  and  orders, 
that  due  and  harty  thanks  be  rendered  to  them  by  this  Court  for  theire  pajnes 
and  service  therein,  and  shallbe  willing  and  ready  to  make  them  further  sattis- 
faccbn  in  the  graunt  of  some  lands  to  each  of  them  respectiuely,  when  any 
shallbe  presented. 

Whereas  Majo''  Gennerall  Daniell  Dennison  did,  vppon  intelligence  of  Major  Gen. 
some  thousands  of  Indians  at  Piscataque,  and  the  great  affiight  of  the  people 
in  those  parts,  the  last  spring,  order  a  party  to  make  a  true  discouery,  and  to 
quiet  the  minds  of  the  inhabitants,  who  were  much  distracted  and  taken  of 
theire  imployments  at  that  busy  time  of  the  yeare,  itt  is  heereby  ordered,  that 
the  counstables  of  Ipswich,  Rowley,  out  of  which  plantacbns  all  the  souldjers 
were  taken,  shall,  by  order  from  the  majo'  gennerall,  pay  to  eQy  footc  souldjer 
for  euery  dajes  ser^'is  one  shilling,  and  to  y"  sarjant  that  coinanded  y"^  party, 
consist  of  23  or  24  men,  two  shillings  for  each  day,  and  to  two  troopers  y* 
were  sent  before  y°  partje,  and  were  on  y"  service  from  Friday  morning  to 
Monday  night,  two  shillings  6"*  p  day,  which  somes  shallbe  allowed  y*  coun- 
stables by  y^  Treasurer. 

*The  Coui-t  having  pervsed  and  considered  the  letters  and  papers  from      r*148.] 


166  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

165  3.      the  Gemierall  Courts  of  Conecticott  and  New  Hauen,  which  were  directed  to 

'        ''        '    the  Governor  and  counsell,  and  by  them  referred  to  the  consideration  of  this 

„       .   .         Court,  the  contents  whereof  wee  finde  to  be   of  great   concernment  to   the 

Commissioners  '  ^ 

on  the  subject   seuerall  Vnited  Collonjes,  and  the  rather  becawse  we  perceive  the  opinnions  of 

of  peace  &  war. 

the  sajd  Courts  seeme  different  from  our  oune,  and  therefore  wee  judge  it  most 
conducing  to  peace  to  wane  disputes  concerning  the  point  in  controversy,  not 
becawse  wee  haue  not  reason  to  justify  the  substance  of  our  declaratjon,  or  to 
answer  the  reasons  brought  to  majntajne  theire  assertjon,  which  conclude  not 
the  queestion  in  difference,  but  only  that  which  wee  neuer  denyed,  viz.,  that 
the  cofiaissioners  haue,  by  the  words  of  the  articles,  power  to  determine  the 
justice  of  an  ofFencive  warre,  our  assertion,  which  they  seeme  to  oppose,  being 
this,  viz.,  the  coinissioners  haue  not  power  to  determine  the  justice  of  an  of- 
feucive  warre,  so  as  to  oblige  the  seuerall  colonjes  to  act  accordingly,  which, 
if  it  had  binn  observed,  would  haue  prevented  that  opposition  that  hath  binn 
made,  ffor  wee  haue  no  cawse  to  doubt  but  the  rest  of  the  colonjes,  well  con- 
sidermg  the  case,  will  readily  joj-ne  with  vs  in  this  explication  of  the  artic- 
tles:  "Whereas  it  is  agreed  that,  for  the  mannaging  &  concluding  of  all 
affaires,  &6,  two  comissioners  shallbe  chosen  by,  and  out  of,  each  of  these 
fewer  jurisdiccons,  &6,  which  shall  bring  full  power  to  heare,  examine,  weigh, 
and  determine  all  affaires  of  peace  or  warre,  &(3,  provided,  that,  in  case  of  an 
offcnciue  or  vjndictiue  warre,  taking  in  more  confccderates,  making  of  leagues, 
and  sending  aides  to  any  other  then  our  confccderates,  the  Gennerall  Courts 
of  each  jurisdicc8n  be  at  theire  libertje  to  act  according  to  theire  oime  light 
and  conscience,  notwithstanding  any  determination  of  the  comissioners  in  the 
sajd  cases  ;  and  this  reason  may  induce  all  the  colonjes,  becawse  the  Gennerall 
Courts  will  in  the  sajd  cases,  de  facto,  be  judges  of  the  justice  of  theire  oime 
acts,  itt  not  being  to  be  supposed  they  will  act  in  such  weighty  occasions 
without  sattisfaction  to  theire  consciences,  and  therefore,  de  jure,  they  ought 
to  be  free,  and  not  to  be  \aider  a  djlcmma,  either  to  act  without  sattisfaction 
against  theire  light,  or  be  accounted  couenant  breakers,  which  will  hazard  the 
breach  of  the  confocderacy,  which  may  by  this  meanes  be  preserved. 
1"  Sept.  53.  The  coiriissioners  of  the  three  Vnited  Colonjes,  on  receipt  of  y'  Courts 

judgment,  retourned  this  as  an  ans'  thereto :  — 

In  answer  to  a  writing  newly  received  from  the  honnored  Gennerall  Court  of 

the  Massachusetts. 

The  comissioners  for  the  thi-ee  smaller  colonjes  haue  brought  with  them 
full  power  from  theire  respectiue  jurisdiccons  to  heare,  examine,  weigh,  and 
detennine  all  affaires  of  peace,  warre,  leagues,  aides,  &6,  according  to  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  167 

graiSatticall  and  true  sense  of  the  artickles  of  confoederation,  and  hoped  the 
coiuissioneis  for  the  Massachusetts  should  haue  binn  invested  with  the  same 
power,  w''''  the  former  interpretacou  and  the  present  writing  received  from 
this  Gennerall  Court  doe  seeme  to  crosse. 

They  know  well  that  no  authoritje  or  poorer,  either  in  parents,  magis- 
trates, coiTiissioners,  &6,  doth,  or  ought  to,  hold  against  God,  or  his  coiiiands ; 
but  they  conceave  that  is  not  *the  quoestion  heere,  nor  is  any  clawse  or  caution  PMO.I 
more  cleavely  and  fully  (as  they  apprehend)  inserted  in  the  framing  of  any  Comissionera 
coiuonwealth,  jurisdiccon,  &6,  to  preserve  peace  and  righteousncs  then  in  these 
artickles  of  combjnation.  The  coiiiissioners  haue  mett  these  tenn  yeares,  and, 
through  the  presence  and  asistance  of  God,  doe  not  yet  know  of  one  vnjust 
conclusion  made  or  passed  by  them,  though  heerein  they  assume  nothing  to 
themselves,  who  are  men  subject  to  infirmitje  as  well  as  others.  This,  then,  is 
not  the  cawse  of  the  late  interpretacon,  or  present  difference  ;  it  seemes  to  haue 
some  other  bottome ;  they  conceave  this  Gennerall  Court  resolve,  from  tjme 
to  tjme,  not  only  to  judge  of  the  justice,  but  of  the  conveniency,  of  what  the 
coiiiissioners  conclude,  and  that  each  of  the  fower  Gennerall  Coui'ts  shall  doe 
the  like,  and  to  act  no  further  then  themselves  will  professe  to  see  light,  and 
to  receave  sattisfaction  to  theire  consciences;  so  that  though  the  coiiiissioners 
determine  vppon  grounds  good  and  safe  in  themselves,  yett  theire  conclusions 
(as  most  things  are)  shall,  in  one  Courte  or  other,  be  still  liable  to  doubt  and 
quoestion,  which  apparently  tends  to  breake  the  confu?deration ;  for  they  con- 
ceaue  that  neither  colonjes  nor  coiiiissioners  will  finde  encouragement  to  beare  Dat.  2  Sep',  63. 
such  charges,  and  make  such  journejes,  vppon  such  vncertajne  and  unsattis- 
f)-ing  termes.  Subscribed, 

THO:  PRENCE, 
JOHN  BROUNE, 
RO:  LUDLOWE, 
JNO:  CULLICKE, 
THEOPH:  EATON, 
JNO:  ASTWOOD. 

Vnto  which  reply  of  the  comissioners  the  Court  sent  them  this  answer. 

The  Courte  cannot  but  judge  it  necessaiy  that  the  explicatjon  presented  in  Courts  2  ans'. 
our  last  paper  be  incerted  into  the  artickles  of  confoederation,  as  much  condu- 
cing to  the  right  vnderstanding  of  the  confocderacy,  and  the  office  and  nature 
of  coiiiissioners,  who  at  first,  and  in  some  colonjes  to  this  tjme,  were  chosen 
by  the  Gennerall  Courts  to  be  theire  counsell  in  these  wcjghty  affaires,  not  to 
be  theire  gouerno''s  to  comand  or  enjoyne  them,  the  consequence  whereof  wee 


168  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  53.  suppose  will,  In  a  little  tjme,  be  resented  by  others  as  well  as  ourselves  ; 
'  ''  "'  therefore  wee,  being  desirous  to  avojde  contests  or  prolix  disputes  with  the 
coiuissioners,  doe  desire  this  maybe  accepted  as  our  finall  conclusion  for  the 
present,  viz. :  that  wee  cannot  graunt  that  the  seuerall  jurisdiccons  are  subor- 
dinate or  subject  to  the  authoritje  of  the  coiiiissioners,  and  therefore  not 
bound,  in  foro  ciuilj,  to  execute  theire  determinatjons,  nor  act  according  to 
theire  judgments  in  making  ofFenciue  warre,  leagues,  or  aides,  becawse  potes- 
tas  bellj  gerendj  aut  pacis  sancjendsB,  salua  majestate  jmperij  eripi  nequit ;  not- 
withstanding, if  theire  judgement  and  deterniinatjon  be  just  and  according  to 
the  word  of  God,  wee  doe  acknowledge  the  coloujes  to  be  bound  to  act  ac- 
coi'dingly,  not  only  in  foro  conscientjae,  becawse  the  determinations  are  just, 
but  in  foro  civilj,  becawse  of  the  contract  and  league  betweene  the  confceder- 
ates,  although  not  by  the  authoritje  of  the  coiiiissioners. 

An  answer  to  a  second  writing  received  from  the  honnored  Gennerall  Court 

of  the  Massachusetts. 

The  fower  colonjes,  vnitjng,  did,  by  expresse  words  and  according  to  the 
true  sence  of  the  artickles,  enter  into  a  perpetuall  league  and  couenant  for 
themselues  and  theire  posteritjes,  that  theire  eight  coiiiissioners,  or  any  sixe 
of  them,  should  haue  full  power  to  heare,  examine,  weigh,  and  determine  all 
affaires  of  warre  and  peace,  leagues,  ajdes,  &G,  propper  to  the  confccderation, 
wherein  no  one  colonje  or  Gennerall  Court  alone  can  haue  power  to  act  for 
[*150.]      the  rest ;  though  the  coiiiissioners  still  readily  *acknowledge  that  all  counsells, 
lawes,  and  conclusions,  whither  of  magistrates,  Gennerall  Courts,  or  coiiiis- 
sioners, so  farre  as  they  are  mannifestly  vnjust,  are,  and  ought  to  be,  accounted 
Comissio's  2''     of  no  force.    Let  God  be  exalted,  and  all  sorts  of  men  sett  (where  they  should 
^''^,  I.'      ,„      he)  at  his   feete :  but  the  power  of  determining  cannot  be  taken  from  the 

0  Sept.  53.  ^  ^  " 

coiiiissioners  without  vjolation  of  the  couenants.  They  haue  no  power  to 
make  new  artickles,  nor  may  act  as  coiiiissioners.  If  the  former  be  broken,  they 
shall  acquaint  theire  respective  Gennerall  Courts  with  the  finall  conclusion  of 
this  colonje,  dated  and  received  this  present  day,  and  leaue  it  to  theu'e  consid- 
eration, propounding  only  to  yo''s,  wither  it  will  not  be  a  great  sinne  against 
God,  and  very  scandalous  before  men,  that  a  confccderation  five  yeeres  vnder 
deliberation  in  New  England,  and  since  contjnewed  tenn  yeares  without 
jnconvenjence,  nay,  with  a  blessing,  —  a  confoederatjon  wherein  euery  artickle 
was  considered  and  weighed,  not  only  by  a  coiiiittec  from  each  of  the  fower 
jurisdiccons,  but  by  the  whole  Gennerall  Courte  of  the  Massachusetts  then 
sitting ;  a  confcederation  for  which  prayer  was  put  vp  publicquly  while 
it  was  vnder  treaty,  and  publicque  thanks  retourned  when  it  was  finished,  — 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  169 


7  Septemoer. 


should  by  this  Courtc  bee  first  distmbcd  by  a  strajued  interjiretacon,  1 G  5  3. 
as  if  the  artickles  gaue  no  power  to  the  coiiiissioners  to  act  in  an  ofFencive 
warre,  and  after,  ■\\'hen  that  was  cleered  and  yeilded,  to  deprjue  them 
of  all  power  in  ofFencive  warre,  leagues,  aides,  &S.  They  must  meete  only  to 
giue  advice,  which  any  of  the  seuerall  jurisdiccons  might  take  or  leaue,  as 
themselues  see  cawse,  and  so  make  all  vojd  ;  and  that  becawse  the  majesty  or 
lionnor  of  goQnment  cannot  be  preserved,  if  the  power  of  making  warre  and 
setling  peace  be  in  the  hands  of  comissioners,  and  chosen  gennerally  out  of  and 
by  the  ffreenicn  of  the  fowcr  colonjes,  which,  by  the  confcederation,  are  made 
and  ordered  to  contjnew  one,  and  to  be  called  by  the  name  of  the  Vnited 
Colonjes  of  New  England ;  whereby  the  couenant  and  league,  so  solemnly, 
seriously,  and  religjously  made,  must  necessarily  breake  and  be  dissolved ;  but 
whither  this  vjolation  proceed  from  some  vnwarrantable  scruple  of  conscjence, 
or  from  some  other  ingagement  of  spiritt,  the  Massachusetts  neither  expresse, 
nor  will  the  coinissioners  determine,  but  leave  it  to  the  wise  and  righteous 
God,  who  is  the  only  Lord  of  the  consciences  and  spiritts  of  men. 
Subscribed, 

THO  PRENC:,  JNo   CULLICKE, 

JNo  BROUNE,  THEOFH:   EATON, 

EOG:   LUDLOW,  JNo  ASTWOOD. 

Vnto  which  reply  the  Court  sent  them  this  answer,  as  followeth :  — 

Gentl :  — 

Wee  conceaue  wee  had  some  reason  to  thinke  yourselues  were  not  vnfur- 
nished  with  power  at  this  tjme  to  declare  the  true  sence  of  the  articles  of 
confcederation  which  was  in  question  betweene  vs  and  some  of  your  Gen- 
nerall  Courts,  this  Courte  being  called  on  purpose  to  giue  the  oppertunitje, 
that  by  a  speedy  and  amicable  way  the  sajd  quaestion  might  be  cleered  and  re- 
solved to  mutuall  sattisfaccon ;  and,  in  pursuance  thereof,  this  Courte  hath 
tendered  to  yo""  consideration  (not  any  new  articles  concerning  which  they 
neuer  desired  or  accepted  yow  should  be  in  a  capacitje  to  treate)  some  prop- 
positions  concerning  theire  desii'ed  explanation  of  the  articles,  and  theire  oune 
sence  of  them,  by  which  they  conceave  (notwithstanding  your  *former  and  [*15L] 
present  intimacons)  they  are  no  violaters  of  the  articles ;  and  if  yo"^  vnder- 
standing  shall  for  that  reason  render  vs  such,  and  vppon  that  accompt  yow 
shall  refuse  to  proceede  with  our  coiiiissioners,  whom  wee  haue  authorized 
according  to  the  articles,  wee  are  confident  to  be  secured  from  that  jmputation 
before  jmpartiall  judges.  Seing,  therefore,  yow  are  not  in  a  capacity,  wee 
shall  not  any  further  make  applicatjon  to  yow,  which  vpj)on  that  accompt  willbe 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  22 


170  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

rendered  fruiteless.  "Wee  shall  henceforth  adresse  o''selves  to  the  seuerall 
Gennerall  Courts  of  our  confocderates,  to  whom  wee  doubt  not  but  oiu-  sence 
of  the  articles  presented  vnto  yow  will  (if  rightly  understood)  be  most  accept- 
able, being,  as  wee  concejve,  the  true  and  genuine  sence  —  not  any  pticcular 
interest  of  this  colonje,  or  any  member  thereof.  And  for  the  present  wee  doe 
declare  (in  the  sinceritje  of  our  harts)  our  vufeigned  desires  of  the  ppetuitje 
of  the  confcederation,  and  of  the  coinissioners  actjug  at  this  present  meeting 
according  to  theire  comissions,  which  if  they  doe  not  wee  must  protest  our 
jnnocency.  Wee  take  leaue,  further,  by  answering  some  other  passages  in 
your  last  paper,  to  cleare  our  oune  meanings  in  our  proppositions  tendered 
to  .yow :  that  this  confcederacy  was  the  result  of  some  yeares  laboiu's, 
and  the  subject  of  prajer  and  prajses,  wee  doe  confesse,  and  yow  may  please  to 
beleive  (as  wee  haue  professed)  is  so  to  this  day  with  vs  in  the  true  sence 
thereof ;  the  guilt  of  the  violation  whereof,  becawse  scaudalows,  wee  are  re- 
solved not  to  drawe  vppon  ourselves,  and  hope  oiu-  confcederates  will,  in  theire 
wisdomes,  avojd. 

Your  confession  that  the  mannifestly  vnjust  determinatjons  of  the  coinis- 
sioners are  of  no  force,  is  of  litle  force  in  this  case,  where  yow  secLuallize 
them  with  the  lawes  of  magistrates,  or  Gennerall  Courts,  whose  authoritje, 
(though  the  conclusion  be  in  its  oune  nature  vnjust,  and  so  judged  by  the  sub- 
ject,) yett  judged  by  themselves  just,  will  oblige  the  person  concerned,  though 
not  to  obedience,  yett  to  poenalties. 

Wee  doe  not  nor  will  not  deny  but  by  the  articles  of  confoederatjon,  8  or 
6  comissioners  haue  power  to  heare,  examine,  wejgh,  and  determine  all  af- 
faires of  peace,  warre,  leagues,  aides,  &S,  propper  to  the  confcederation ;  neither 
did  wee  euer  jmagine,  and  therefore  wonder,  it  should,  at  least  seemingly,  be 
jmposed  vppon  vs,  that  any  one  colonje  or  Gennerall  Courte,  alone,  had  power 
to  act  for  the  rest,  or  that  wee  doe  affirme  the  coiiiissioners  must  meete  only 
to  giue  advice,  which  the  seuerall  jurisdiccons  may  take  or  leaue,  as  themselves 
see  cawse,  and  so  make  all  vojde.  Haue  wee  not  in  terminis  acknowledged 
ourselues  bound  to  act  according  to  theire  just  determinatjons  before  God  and 
man,  by  virtue  of  our  confoederacje,  (though  not  by  any  other  authoritje,) 
what  bonds  yow  lay  vppon  vs  ?  Cann  wee  be  jmagined  to  be  obliged  to  act  the 
determinatjons  of  more  then  eight  of  the  ablest  and  wisest  gent  in  all  the  col- 
lonjes,  were  wee  not  bound  by  our  confoederacje  ?  Wee  may,  therefore,  with 
lesse  offence,  challenge,  and  assert  our  oiuie  interest,  becawse  wee  are  ready  to 
giue  others  theire  due ;  neither  is  it  a  point  of  majesty  or  honnor  wee  labor 
for,  but  an  essentiall  part  of  that  jntire  gouernment  which  is  reserved  to  each 
colonje  in  the  articles,  before  the  very  office  ;  much  more,  the  power  of  comis- 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  171 

sioners  be  provided  for,  which  being  preserved  to  vs  jnviolable,  wee  shallbe      1653. 

farre  from  opposing  the  power  of  the  coiTiissioners,  but  doe  acknowledge  our-    "■" — ^ ' 

selves  bound  to  assert  and  defend  the  same.     But  if  oure  owne  rights  are    '  ^''P''^"''""'- 

jnvaded,  wee  shallbe  thereby  disenabled  from  maintayning  others  :  though  wee 

desiie  to  kecpe  ourselves  free  from  jnfringing  them,  wee  will  not  take  vppon 

vs  to  determine  the  cawsc  of  this  jnterest  bctweene  the  Courte  and  yoiu'selves  ; 

wee  shall  challenge  the  like  libertje  w"^  the  coinissioners,  and  leave  it  to  the 

Lord,  the  Judge  of  the  spiritts  of  all  men. 

*To  which  the  coiiiissioners  made  this  reply :  —  [*1.52.] 

TT  1  t~i        t  ^  September. 

llonnoreu  uentlcmcn : 

The  coinissioners  of  the  three  smaller  colonjes  did  suppose  the  answer  Comissioners 
given  by  two  of  the  Gennerall  Coiu-tes  had  suficijently  cleared  the  sence  of  ^'^^' '' 
the  articles  and  power  of  the  coinissioners.  The  colonjes  confcederating,  and 
the  freemen  choosing  and  sending  them,  doe  impower  them  to  conclude  and 
determine  in  all  affaires  propper  to  the  confoederatjon.  If  any  doubt  yett  re- 
majne,  wee  conceave  it  maybe  further  cleared  by  what  was  presented  by  or 
from  yo'"selves  to  the  coinissioners  at  Pljmoutli,  anno  1648,  about  explanation 
and  setling  a  right  vnderstanding  some  things  in  the  articles. 

1.  That  by  '  safety,'  in  the  second  article,  is  only  intended  safety  from 
an  enemy,  not  from  coiiion  evidences,  as  famine,  pestilence,  &d.,  and  the  same 
of  '  coiiion  welfare.' 

2.  That  the  scope  of  the  eight  articles  extend  only  to  cawses  which  con- 
ceme  diuerse  of  the  colonjes,  (not  any  one  in  itself,)  or  some  one  or  more  of  the 
colonjes,  and  some  neighbors  plantacon,  not  w*in  the  confoederation ;  and  by 
'  Indjans  '  to  be  meant  Indjan  straingers,  &6. 

3.  In  cases  of  a  ciuill  nature,  where  the  coinissioners  may  haue  power  to 
make  orders,  &6,  yett  not  to  haue  power  to  make  any  gennerall  officer  of  a 
ciuill  nature  to  execute  such  orders,  but  the  same  to  be  executed  by  the 
officers  of  such  jurisdiccon  as  shall  be  concerned  therein ;  and  if  such 
jurisdiccon  or  colouje  shall  not  submitt  and  performe,  &5,  after  due  admoni- 
tjon,  then  to  be  responsall  to  the  rest  of  the  colonjes  for  breach  of  league  and 
couenant,  and  to  be  declared  what  further  power  the  coiiiissioners  haue  in  such 
case,  &S. 

The  comissioners  then  concurred  with  the  Massachusetts  in  these  expli- 
cations, as  cleerely  agreeing  with  the  true  scope  of  the  artickles,  as  may 
appeare  by  the  records  of  that  session,  but  could  not  admitt  of  any  alterations  | 

propounded. 

Whereas  this  honnored  Court  expresse  theu-e  confidence  to  be  secm-ed 
from  any  imputation  of  violating  of  the  articles  before  impartiall  judges,  they 


X72  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

mention  not  who  those  judges  are,  but  the  coiuissioners  conceave  they  intend 
our  impartial!  superiors  in  England,  wherewith  they  readily  close. 

What  adresses  this  Court  shall  please  to  make  to  the  other  three  Gen 
nerall  Courts,  the  coinissioners  are  assured,  willbc  according  to  righteousnes 
duly  attended. 

The  difference  yow  would  put  betweene  the  power  of  Gennerall  Courts 
and  the  coiuissioners,  w*in  theu-e  propper  concemments,  wee  vnderstand  not, 
nor  doe  wee  conceive  yourselves  were  of  that  minde.  Ann"  1648,  wee  haue 
sufficijently  expressed  our  aphencons,  and  shall  only  add,  that  when  any 
authoritje  impose  poenaltjes  in  cases  where  the  subject  cannot  according  to  God 
obey,  guilt  willbe  charged.  Joab  sinned  in  obeying  in  the  death  of  Vrjah, 
and  David  had  also  sinned  had  he  pimnished  Joab  for  his  disobedjence  to  such 
a  cofnand.  As  no  colony  hath  power  to  act  for  the  rest,  so  no  one  colony 
w'Mn  this  couenant  of  confmderation  may,  to  the  pjudice  of  the  rest,  reject  the 
determinations  of  the  coiuissioners,  not  manifestly  vijjust. 

That  peculiar  jurisdiccbn  with  the  articles  reference  to  each  colonje  the 
coiuissioners  neuer  quaestioned,  nor  they  (they  hope)  shall  euer  haue  any 
thought  in  the  least  to  incroach  vppon ;  but  wherein  that  consists  yo''selues 
expressed  in  yo'  proppositions,  1648,  before  nienconed,  and  by  a  due  consid- 
eration of  the  passages  in  other  articles,  compared  with  the  11"^,  yow  may 
possibly  receive  fui-thcr  light. 
[*153.]  *To  conclude :  wee  may  safely  (to  say  no  more)  protest  our  oune  readj- 

ues  to  preserve  the  articles  in  theire  full  strength. 

And  to  attend  o'^  duty  in  the  present  meeting,  obstniccons  cast  in  by  tliis 
Court  being  duely  remooved,  if  yow  therefore  please  to  expresse  yo'^  resolu- 
tion to  continew  the  just  power  of  the  coinissioners,  according  to  the  true 
sence  of  the  articles,  as  till  this  yeeare  euer  intended  and  vnderstood,  both  by 
yourselues  and  all  the  other  colonjes,  till  any  other  articles,  explication,  or 
provission  be  agreed  by  the  fower  Gennerall  Courts,  the  coiuissioners  shall 
presently  and  cheerfully  proceed  ;  if  not,  (w^'out  further  losse  of  tjme,)  they 
desire  to  retourne  to  theire  other  occasions,  and  shall  close  w*  yo"^  close  in 
leaving  the  whole  cawse  to  the  wise  and  just  Judge  who  kuowes  both  o"^  seuerall 
aymes  and  all  the  passages  betwixt  vs  in  this  dispute.  Sept  8"",  1653. 
Subscribed,  THO:    PRENCE, 

JN°  BROUNE, 
ROGER  LUDLOW, 
JN°  CULLICKE, 
THEOPH:  EATON, 
JNo  ASTWOOD.* 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 

To  the  comissioners  of  the  Vnited  Colonjes. 
Gentlemen :  9  September. 

Wee  see  not  reason  to  protract  tjme  in  fruitelesse  and  needles  retournes ;  Courts  4"'  ans'. 
wee  shall  acquiesce  in  o'  last  paper,  and  comitt  the  successe  to  God.     By 
y°  Coiut,  9  September,  1653. 

EDW:    RAWSON,  Secret 

To  which  this  answer  was  retoumed  :  —  10  September. 

The  coiiiissioners  for  the  tlu'ee  colonjes  judged  of  the  meaning  of  the 
Massachusetts  Gennerall  Courte  by  theire  expressions  in  former  writings,  and 
accordingly  retourned  answers  to  which  they  still  referr.  What  that  Courte 
doth  this  day  declare,  the  comissioners  so  farr  accept  that  they  purpose  pres- 
ently to  procecde  referring  all  further  quoestious  to  the  adresses  the  Massa- 
chusets  shall  please  to  make  to  the  other  Gennerall  Courts.  .     Sept  10,  1653. 

The  Court,  being  informed  by  one  of  our  coiiiissioners,  that  o''  true  mean- 
ing concerning  the  qusestion  in  debate  is  not  rightly  vndcrstood  by  the  rest 
of  the  coiTiissioners,  wherein  if  they  were  sattisfied  all  obstruccons  of  theire 
present  actings,  according  to  theire  coiiiissions,  would  be  remooved,  doth  de- 
clare, that  they  judge  and  graunt,  that  by  the  articles  of  confocderation,  so  farr 
as  the  determinations  of  the  coiiiissioners  are  just  and  according  to  God,  the 
seueiall  coUonjes  are  bound  before  God  and  men  to  act  accordingly,  and  that 
they  sinne  and  brcake  couenant  if  they  doe  not ;  but  otherwise  they  judge 
they  are  not  bound,  neither  before  God  nor  men.     By  the  Court. 

EDW:    RAWSON,  Seerel 

The  Courts  letter  to  y'^  seuerall  colonjes  is  iucerted  in  the  Court  booke 
of  records  for  letters,  &<3. 

In  ans''  to  the  request  of  the  tonne  of  Roxbury  for  the  coniirmatjon  of  Roxburv  miili- 
Isacke  Jn°son  to  the  place  of  captaine.  Sari'  Griffith  Crests  to  y°  place  of  t''"T<'ffi'^«''s 

'■  JT  ^  J  J      i  confirmed. 

leftennant,  and  Serjant  John  Boles  to  the  place  of  ensigne,  the  Coiu't  allowes 
theue  choice,  &  graunts  theire  request. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Peter  Bent  for  rcparacon  of  damages  sustajned  Bents  recom- 
in  liis  horses  going  on  the  countrjes  service  to  Conecticott,  the  Couit  vnder-  ^^^J°'  *"' 
standing  the  peticoners  horse  was  by  that  journey  worsted  at  least  sixe  pounds 
in  the  value  of  it,  besides  his  charge  for  the  cure  and  the  hire  of  it,  they 
therefore  judge  meete  and  order,  that  he  shallbe  allowed  teun  pounds  out  of 


174  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  53.      the  countije  levy,  if  he  accept  thereof,  or  otherwise  he  may  haue  libertje  to 
"'^  sue  the  Treasurer,  and  recouer  what  damage  he  cann  justly  prooue. 

10  September. 

M' Dudleys  es-  ^^  '^^^^^  ^'^  ^  qusBstion,  whither  the  estate  of  Thomas  Dudley,  Es^^,  late 

tate  free  from    pf  Jtoxbury,  deceased,  should  be  Ijable  to  the  countrje  levy,  now  to  be  gath- 
ered, the  Court  judgeth  it  to  be  free  &  exempt  from  being  Ijable  to  pay  to 
his  countrje  rate. 
[*154.]  *In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Isacke  Boswell,  the  Court,  on  the  examination 

Courts  judgm"  ^f  jj^g  case,  and  all  the  evidences  thereabouts,  betweene  him  and  Jn"  Cheny, 

in  Boswells 

case.  doe  finde  that  the  peticoncr  Boswell  hath  a  legall  deed  of  sale  from  M'  Batt 

for  the  howse  and  land  in  quaestion,  and  possession  thereof,  &  payment  for 
it ;  and  doe  declare,  that  Cheny,  nor  any  in  whose  behalf  he  sued  at  Salis- 
bury Court,  hath  any  legall  right  to  it ;  and  therefore  judgeth  the  sentence  of 
the  Court  at  Salisbury  to  be  of  no  force,  and  that  Boswell,  the  petitioner,  shall 
remajne  in  peaceable  possession  of  the  premisses,  and  shallbe  sattisfied  all  his 
charges  expended  in  the  case. 

Courts  judgm'  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  W"  Blanton  for  releife  ag'  two  Indjans  now 

in  Blantons         ..  .  ,  ^  ,         ,  .        ,  .        ,  oi-  i 

case  &  y  In-     i"^  prison  on  suspition  01  breaking  his  chest  open  &  taking  out  twenty  pounds 

djans.  jjj  money,  the  Court,  hauing  heard  the  case,  and  examining  all  the  evidences 

betweene  the  peticoner  and  the  Indjans,  cannot  finde  the  Indjans  legally  guilty 

of  what  is  charged  on  them,  and  doe  therefore  judge,  that  the  peticoner  should 

pay  what  charge  hath  binu  expended  by  the  Indjans  in  prison. 

Blantons  ai-  In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  W™  Blanton   for  sattisfaction  for  the  diet  of 

week  for  diett    ^'^°  Frenchmen  a  month,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  shall  sattisfy  the 

of  2  French-      g^:^  Blanton  after  the  rate  of  fine  shillings  p  weeke  for  each  man. 

men.  •'  . 

Courts  ans'  to  In   ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Jn"    Becket,   Anthony  Bing,  <&:    others,  the 

c'^'^se  ^ ^^ '"   Court  declares  the  peticoners  must  seeke  theire  legall  redresse  at  a  County 
Court    or  speciall  Court,  this   Court  not  being  willing   to    medle  w""  such 
cases. 
Courts  judgm'  In  the  case  of  Christopher  Batt  against  the  toune  of  Salisbury,  p  appeale 

Ban  &Toune  '  ^^°^  ^^^  Court  at  Salisbury,  att  the  Court  of  Assistants,  the  jury  finding  for 
of  Salsbury.      j-j^g  plaintiff,  the  Court  not  consenting  to  receive  the  verdict,  it  came  to  the 
Gennerall  Court  of  course.     This  Court,  on  hearing  of  the  case  &  examina- 
tion of  all  evidences,  finds  for  y^  toune  of  Sahsbury. 
M'  Aliens  Whereas  Capt  Eleazer  Lusher  &  Edmond  Rice  were  appointed  by  this 

stow^iaid  our*  Court  to  lay  out  a  farme  of  two  hundred  acres,  at  Bogerstow,  vppon  Charles 
&  confirm'd.      Riugr^  to  M''  Jn°  Allen,  pastor  of  Dedham,  which  they  hauing  donn,  appear- 
ing by  a  platt  brought  into  Court,  the  Court  approoves  thereof. 
Hampton  In  ans"^  to  y^  request  of  the  deputy  of  Hampton,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the 

bounds  lajd  ^     ,  ,  .  ^^ 

out  retourne  of  the  comissioners  appointed  to  lay  out  the  west  end  of  Hampton 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  175 

bouuds  shall  be  recorded,  which  this  Court  approoves  of,  &  is  as  foUowcth : 
Wee,  whose  names  are  heerevnder  written,  being  chosen  by  the  Gennerall 
Court  to  lay  out  the  west  end  of  Hampton  bounds,  vppon  o"^  best  informacon, 
haue  concluded  that  the  west  Ijne  shall  runue  from  the  extent  of  the  Ijne 
formerly  agreed  vppon,  to  come  w"'in  two  miles  of  Exitur  meeting  howse, 
vppon  a  direct  Ijne,  to  that  parte  of  Asse  Brooke  where  the  high  way  goes 
ouer,  and  from  thence  vppon  a  dkect  Ijne  so  as  to  leave  Exitm-  Falls  a  mile 
ik,  halfe  due  north  of  the  same,  and  from  thence  vppon  a  west  &  by  north 
Ijne  as  £irr  as  the  vtmost  extent  of  Salisbury  bounds  that  way ;  wee  intend  the 
falls  at  the  toune  bridge. 

SAM:    WINSLEY, 
THO«   BRADBURY, 
ROBERT   PYKE. 

*In  ans""  to  a  motjon  or  request  of  M"^  Cleve,  the  Coiut  retourned  him      [*155.] 
this  ans' :     M'  Cleve,  according  to  yo''  desire,  wee  tender  this  account  of  our  Courts  ans'  to 

°         •'  M'Cleves. 

proceedings  at  Wells,  Cape  Porpuss,  Saco,  &d.  In  the  yeare  1652  wee  or- 
dered some  members  of  this  Court,  with  two  artists,  to  make  a  true  discouery 
of  the  most  northerly  branch  of  Merrimacke,  that  accordingly  wee  might  lay 
out  the  northerly  lyne  of  our  pattent,  which  is  to  extend  three  miles  beyond 
the  most  northerly  parte  of  Merrimacke  Riuer,  which  lyne  is  to  runne 
through  the  maine  land  of  America,  from  east  to  west,  in  the  lattitude  of  43'^ : 
43  :  '2^.  And  in  further  prosecution  of  the  same,  wee  did,  in  July  last,  dispatch 
our  comissioners  to  Wells,  Cape  Porpuss,  and  Saco,  to  challenge  our  right  by 
pattent  ouer  those  parts,  where  the  inhabitants  did  voluntarily  acknowledge 
themselves  subject  to  this  gouernment,  &  tooke  the  oath  of  fidellity  &  freemea 
to  the  same ;  our  coinissioners  publishing  a  protestation  at  Wells  against  any 
person  or  persons  that  should  challenge  jurisdiccbn,  or  excercise  any  act  of 
authoritje  ouer  them,  or  any  other  persons  inhabitting  w"'in  the  Ijmitts  of  our 
pattent,  (which  doth  extend  to  the  lattitude  of  43"* :  43 :  ^2  of  northerly  latti- 
tude,) but  what  shallbe  derived  from  the  Gennerall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts  ; 
all  w"^""  acts  of  oiu'  coinissioners  wee  haue  ratified  and  confirmed,  and  shall  en- 
deavor, by  all  lawfuU  meanes,  to  majntaine  &  defend  oiu-  just  right  in  those 
Ijarts  graunted  vnto  vs  in  our  pattent. 

The  Court  being  informed  by  Lef?  W™  Davies  and  M"^  Henry  Shrimp-  LePW-Davies 
ton,  that  M'  Dickery  Caruithen  is  this  morning  departed  this  life,  and  that  by  ^^^  ',  ^^  ^^^ 
reason  thereof  the  affaii-es  of  the  ouners  of  the  sajd  shipp  and  goods,  respect-  about  M'Caru- 

thens  estate  & 

ing  the  accomplishment  of  his  vojage,  is  wholy  left  destitute,  both  of  a  meete  freight,  &c. 
ma"'  and  power  to  carry  on  both  the  accompts  of  the  sajd  owners  and  M' 


176  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


10  September. 


1653.  Caruithens  oune  affaires,  and  having  pervsed  the  last  will  and  testament  of 
the  sajd  Dickery  Caruithen,  finding  his  care,  both  for  the  ouners  and  his  oune 
affaires,  to  be  such  as  by  a  letter  of  attourney  and  last  branch  of  his  will, 
desiring  that  the  sajd  Left  Davis,  &  M'"  Henry  Shrimpton,  as  his  agents  and 
attourneys,  should  fully  be  impowred  to  sue,  demand,  and  receave  all  debts, 
goods,  freight,  &6,  due  to  Mm  or  the  sajd  owners  ;  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete, 
that  the  sajd  Left  W™  Davis  and  M''  Henry  Shrimpton  shall  and  hereby  are 
impowred  to  acte  according  to  the  sajd  letter  of  attourney  and  last  branch  of 
the  sajd  will,  and  they  are  to  be  responsall  so  farr  as  the  estate  they  receave 
into  theue  hands  reach  vuto ;  also  for  all  debts  ouing  by  the  sajd  Caruithen, 
or  w'  else  may  justly  be  challenged  from  the  ouners  of  the  sajd  shipp,  that  so 
the  estate  of  the  ouners  and  M'  Caruithen  may  not  suflFer  by  theire  defects. 
Ans'  to  wid-  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Mary  Carter,  and  Thomas,  Samuell,  and  Joseph, 

petico  ^^'^  sonns,  the  Coiut  judgeth  the  way  propounded  is  best  for  the  good  of  the 

grand  childi'en,  and  therefore  are  willing  that  tenn  pounds  be  deliuered  to 
each  of  the  parents  of  the  legatees,  with  the  proportion  of  the  price  the  acre  of 
land  is  sould  for,  they  giving  securitje  to  the  execcutors  to  pay  the  widdow  for 
her  life  what  shallbe  aequall,  and  to  the  child  of  each  of  them  according  to 
the  will. 

Capt.  Jeani-  Wee,  wliose  names  are  vnderwritten,  being  appointed  by  the  last  session 

laid^out  to  ^'^  °^  ''^^^  Court  to  lay  out  the  two  hundred  acres  of  land  graunted  vnto  Cap?  Jean- 
EdmondEice.  jgQ^  yj^j^Q  Edmond  Rice,  the  purchaser,  doe  heereby  testify,  that  wee  haue  lajd 
it  out  accordingly  on  the  27  of  the  G"*  ifi  last  past,  and  is  bounded  vppon 
the  east  nere  Water  Tonne  bounds,  vppon  the  west  partly  w""  ]M'  Dunsters 
ffarme,  vppon  the  south  it  points  neere  Dedham  bounds,  vppon  the  north  it 
Ijeth  nere  the  bounds  of  Sudbury,  w'^'^  the  Court  approoves  of. 

SYMON   WILLARD, 
JNo   SHERMAN. 

[*156.]  *Wee,  whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  being  legally  chosen  by  our  tonnes. 

Redding  way  ^^  virtue  of  a  Couit  Order,  to  lay  out  the  countrje  way  betwi.xt  Redding  and 
Winnesemett,  and  having  vejwed  the  sajd  wajes,  wee  aphend  it  most  con- 
venjent  to  be  as  followes :  from  Redding  Toune  through  Maiden  bounds, 
betwixt  the  pond  and  John  Smiths  land,  and  so  by  the  east  side  of  M"'  Joseph 
Hills  land  to  New  Hocles  Hole,  and  so  in  the  old  way  by  the  Cowpeu,  and 
thence  along  on  the  east  side  of  Thomas  Coitmorcs  lott,  by  Ell  Pond,  in  the 
old  way,  to  Thomas  Lynds  laud,  then  through  his  first  feild,  and  so  by  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY   IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  177 

feild  by  his  howse,  from  thence  in  the  old  way  by  y^  meeting  howse  through 
Stony  Swampe,  from  the  roade  there  vpp  betwixt  Richard  Addams  &  John 
Vphams  lotts  into  Charles  Toune  bounds,  through  WiUjam  Johnsons  &  Rich- 
ard Dexters  land,  into  the  way  by  the  south  spring,  and  so  on  the  south  side 
of  Whittamore  Howse  into  lAP  Bellingham  laud,  into  the  way  that  goeth  to 
the  ferry,  the  sajd  way  to  be  fowre  pole  broad  in  good  ground  and  six  or  eight 
pole,  &(5,  where  neede  req^uires.     30  :  6  m",  1653. 

Signed, 

TIP  MARSHALL, 
JN°  ■  SMITH, 
JN°   SPRAUGE. 
Y«  act  of  which  comissioners  the  Court  approoved  of. 

In  ans'  to  the  petioon  of  Christopher  Gibson,  Michaell  Willis,  Jn"  Far-  Courts  ans- to 
nam,  and  George  Davis,  in  behalfe  of  the  rest  of  the  new  church  in  Boston,  V  "'" "''"''' 
for  the  taking  away  an  injunction  of  y-  County  Court  forbidding  them  to'  'veti^T"" 
proceede  to  call  or  ordajne  ISI''  Powell  to  office  amongst  them,  the  Magis'^  deny 
that  any  order  was  made  by  them  absolutely  to  forbidd  the  new  church  in 
Boston  to  call  M^  Powell  to  office,  but  only  to  the  office  of  pastor  or  teacher, 
for  either  of  which  two  sajd  offices  this  Court  cannot  but  judge  M--  Powell  to 
be  vnfitt,  nor  cann  they  consent  thereto,  becawse  they  are  not  sattislied  that 
he  hath  such  abillitjes,  learning,  and  qualliffications  as  are  requisite  and  neces- 
sary for  an  able  minister  of  the  gospell,  whereby  he  might  be  able  rightly  to 
divide  the  word  of  trueth,  and  be  able  to  convince  gainesayers  ;  besides   the 
vnsuitablenes  of  theise  times  complying  w"^  such  vnsound  tcnnents  as  now 
abound  for  the  subvertion  of  an  able  ministrje.     They  conceave  the  church 
may  call  M''  Powell  to  the  office  of  a  ruling  elder  amongst  them,  and  then 
they  may  enjoy  all  the  ordinances  of  Christ  saue  the  sacraments,  which  they 
are  supplyed  with  in  the  church  of  Boston  ;  and  theire  wajting  till  the  Lord 
shall  send  in  to  them  an  able  minister  of  the  gosi^cll  they  hope  will  not  be  in 
vajne,  but  maybe  conducing  to  the  peace  and  comfort  of  themselves,  and  to  the 
toune  and  countrje  also,  who  is  much  concerned  therein. 

Itt  is   ordered,   that  ^  Heyden,   of   Brauntrje,  shall    haue  five  Heidens  gratu- 

pounds  pajd  him  this  yeare  by  the  Treasurer  towards  the  keeping  of  his  dis-  "•'^' 
tracted  sonnc,  as  in  tjmes  past. 

In  ans--  to  the  peticon  of  M'  Symon  Bradstreete  and  Capt  Thomas  Wig-  Ans'to  M- 
gin,  M^  Samuell  Winsly  is  appointed  to  joyne  with  Elder  Nutter  insteed  of  ^'^'^'^'^^^  &^ 
Thomas  Canny,  who  hath  lost  is  sight,  to  lay  out  the  land  graunted  to  them  peti5on^'^^'"' 
by  this  Com-t,  on  Quamhiggin  Riuer,  according  to  y''  graunt. 
VOL.    IV. PAKT   I.  23 


178  THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  53.  In  ails'"  to  y<"  petliToii  of  INI""  Bradstrcet,  in  behalf  of  himself  &  M"'  Jn° 

'  ~     y  Woodbridge,  Iklajor  Dennison,  Tho  Dudley,  Jii°  Dudley,  Samuell  Danforth, 

'^^°  Johnson,  &  W™  Parks,  execcuto''^  of  y"  last  will  of  Thomas  Dudley,  Es^, 

Bradstrcet,  &    deceased,  desiring  that  the  parents  or  guardjans  of  the  children  to  whom  y® 
eseccutors  of  mi    i 

M' Dudley  will  sajd  M'  Dudley  gave  vVatertoune  mill  haue  power  to  sell  or  dispose  of  it  for 
(peticon.)         yj  ^^^  ^|.  |.j^g  heires,  the  Court  graunts  theirc  request. 

[*157.]  *Wee,  whose  names  are  herevnder  written,  being  appointed  by  the  hon- 

Andouer  high-  nored  Court  to  lay  out  the  countrje  highway  from  Andever  to  Redding,  haue 

way  to  Read- 
ing, thus  agreed  to  follow  the  cartway  from  Andouer  to  Nicholas  Holts  farme,  leav- 
ing his  howse  about  a  quarter  of  a  mile  on  the  left  hand,  and  so  in  a  streight  Ijne 
south,  or  ncere  south,  to  the  falls  of  Ipswich  Riuer,  according  to  the  marked 
trees,  and  so  from  the  riuer  vjipou  the  like   streight  Ijne,  to   the  heade  of  a 
meadow  called  the  Great  Medow,  and  so  vppon  the  same  Ijne,  ouer  the  snjd 
meadow,  to  the  sawemill  in  Eeading,  and  from   thence   through   the   comon 
come  ffelld  to  the  meeting  howse,  leaving  the  lot  of  Josias  Dordin  on  the  right 
hand  and  Zackary  Fitts  his  lott  on  the  left  hand  ;  and  wee  agree  that  the  sajd 
way  shall  be  fower  rodd  wjde  at  the  least  in  all  places   except  through  the 
coinon  ffeild  at  Redding,  and  there  not  to  be  lessc  then  two  rods. 
M'  Andrews  &  This  Coiirt  doth  appointe  M"'  Samuell  Andrcwcs  &  Jonas  Clarke,  of  Cam- 
ona      ar  e     -[ji.jjjTg   with  all  convenient  speede  to  finde  out  the  place  vppon  the  sea  coast 

to  rune  y«  lyne  ^    '  ■*■  lit 

of  0'  patent  on  -where  the  vtmost  bounds  of  our  pattent  is,  and  there  to  erect  some  marke  or 

Y"  sea  coast. 

heape  of  stones  at  the  place,  and  runne  the  lyne  forty  rods  into  the  countrje, 
east  and  west,  par  ilell  to  the  lattltude,  and  to  make  rctourne  vpj)on  oath  before 
the  Deputy  Gouernor,  or  any  other  inagis'%  which  is  to  be  entred  by  the 
secretary ;  and  for  theire  i^ajnes  and  skill  in  this  worke,  the  Court  doth  ap- 
pointe Cap!  Gookin  to  make  agreement  w"^  them,  which  agreement  the  Treas- 
urer is  hecreby  appointed  to  pay  accordingly,  and  the  former  order  in  reference 
to  this  worke  w""  M'  Ince  &  Sarj'  Sherman  is  heereby  repealed. 
Ans'  to  M'  In  ans"^  to  the  petiGon  of  M''  Emauucll  Downing,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M"" 

Dounings  Samuel  Winsly,  W  Thomas  Bradbury,  and  W'"  Eastow,  they  or  any  two  of 

petioon.  •" 

them,  M'  Winsly  being  one,  shall  and  heereby  are  appointed  and  authorized 
to  lay  out  the  f;irme  of  six  hundred  acres  formerly  graunted  him,  (in  sattis- 
faceon  of  fiffty  pounds  heeretofore  payd  and  layd  out  by  him  for  the  countrje,) 
on  the  further  side  of  the  riuer,  neere  to  Doner  bounds,  being  cleere  of  all 
graunts. 
CoUedge  This  Court,  being  informed  that  the  present  condicon  of  the  colledge  at 

comittee.  Cambridge  calls  for  supply,  doe  order,  that  Cambridge  rate  for  this  yeare,  now 

to  be  collected,  be  pajd  into  the  steward  of  the  colledge,  for  the  discharge  of 
any  debt   due  from  the  countrje  to  the  sajd  colledge ;  and  if  there  be  any 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  I79 

oiierplus,  to  be  and  remajuc  as  the  collcdge  stockc  ;  and  for  fuitlier  clearing 
and  setling  all  matters  in  the  colledge  in  reference  to  the  yearely  maintenance 
of  the  praesident,  ffellowes,  and  necessary  officers  thereof,  and  repayring  the 
howses,  that  so  yearely  complaints  may  be  prevented,  and  a  certajne  way  setled 
for  the  due  encouragement  of  all  persons  concerned  in  that  worke,  doe  hereby 
appointe  il""  Increase  Nowell,  Capt  Daniell  Gookin,  Capt  Jn"  Leueret,  Capt 
Edward  Jn°son,  and  INP  Edward  Jackson,  or  any  three  of  them,  to  be  a  coinittee 
to  examine  the  state  of  the  colledge  in  all  respects,  as  hereafter  is  expressed, 
M''  Nowell  to  giue  notice  of  the  time  and  place  of  meeting.  1.  Fu'st,  to  take 
accompt  of  all  the  incomes  of  the  colledge  proffitts  arising  due  to  the  officers 
thereof,  either  by  guifts,  revenewes,  studdjes,  rents,  tuitions,  cofnencemcnts,  or 
any  other  proffitts  arising  due  from  tjme  to  tjme,  as  neere  as  may  be,  since  the 
president  vndertooke  the  worke. 

2.  To  examine  what  hath  binn  pajd  and  disbursed,  either  for  buildings, 
repayings,  or  otherwise,  pajd  and  receaved  annually  for  the  maintenance  of  the 
praesident,  ffellowes,  and  other  officers  thereof. 

*3.    To  consider  what  hath  binn  yearely  receaved  by  the  praesident  out      [*158.] 
of  any  of  the  incomes  and   proffitts,  for  his   oune  vse   and   majntenance,  (as 
neere  as  convenjeutly  may  be,)  euer  since  he  came  to  the  place  of  praesident ; 
also   what  allowances  yearely  haue   binn  made   to   the   ffisllowes   and   other 
officers. 

4.  To  weigh  and  consider  what  maybe  fitt  for  an  honnorable  and  comfort- 
able allowance  annually,  for  the  praesident,  heretofore  and  for  the  future,  and 
how  it  may  be  pajd  heereafter. 

5.  To  consider  what  noumber  of  fellowes  may  be  necessary  for  carying 
on  the  worke  in  the  sajd  colledge,  and  what  yearely  allowance  they  shall  haue, 
and  how  to  be  pajd. 

6.  To  direct  some  way  how  the  necessaiy  officers,  as  steward,  butler, 
and  cooke,  maybe  provided  for,  that  so  the  schoUers  coiuons  may  not  be  so 
short  as  they  now  are  occasioned  thereby. 

7.  To  take  cognizance  of  all  and  euery  matter  or  thing  concerning  the 
sajd  colledge,  in  reference  to  the  welfare  thereof  in  outward  things,  and  to 
present  a  way  how  to  regulate  and  rectify  any  thing  that  is  out  of  order. 

8.  To  examine  what  somes  haue  binn,  and  of  late  are,  pmised  by  seuerall 
tounes  and  persons  for  the  vse  of  the  colledge,  and  to  giue  order  for  the 
coUectjon  thereof,  and  propose  a  way  how  such  monjes  may  be  improoved  for 
the  best  bennefitt  of  that  society  for  the  future ;  and  this  coiiiittee  are  heereby 
authorized  av"'  full  power  to  act  in  all  the  premises,  and  to  make  retoume  of 


180  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1653.      what  they  doe  to  the  next  Court  of  Election,  to  be  confirmed,  if  they  shall 

^"      *■        '    judge  meete. 

„. ,     ,  jgj  In  aus'  tcr  the  petition  of  ISI"'  John  Newgate,  the  Court   declares,  that 

p"  206.      what  euer  o-oods  of  the  iietiooners  were  intermixed  w**"  his  sonnes,  and  man- 
P"  26.  °  .  .  .  . 

Ans'toM'        naged  by  him,  and  legally  forfeited  through  his  default,  ^  is  but  just  that  the 

Newgats  lawe  take  place,  especially  it  being  donne  in  such  a  season  as  it  was  ;  but  if  the 

peticon.  ^  i  ^  >j 

peticoner  haue  had  any  of  his  goods  taken  illegally  out  of  his  warehouse,  or 
otherwise,  he  may  haue  his  remedy  against  those  that  haue  donne  him  wrong, 
in  a  legall  way. 
Ans'  to  cap'  of  In  answer  to  the  request  of  Cap?  Richard  Davenj)ort,  itt  is  ordered,  that 

y    as  esmo-   ^-^^^  Treasurer  shall  sattisfy  and  pay  the   secretary,  Edward  Rawson,  for  the 
barrell  of  powder  he  had  of  him,  &  was  spent  at  the  interring  of  Thomas 
Dudley,  Es^,  both  for  price  and  pay,  according  to  a  former  agreement  made 
with  the  secritary,  out  of  this  next  countrje  rate  now  levying. 
Courts  graunt  This  Court  doth  graunt  to  ISI''  Symon  Bradstreet  and  M"'  Samuell  Symonds 

B  Tu  *t  & '  ^^^  hundred  acres  of  land  apeece,  to  be  lajd  out  to  them  when  they  shall 
M'  Symons.      present  the  place,  according  to  lawe,  free  from  other  graunts  ;  and  is  in  refer 
ence  to  theire  service  donne  for  the  countrje  at  Yorke,  Kittery,  &S. 

The  coiiiission  graunted  to  the  Coui-t  at  Springfeild  by  this  Court  is  re- 
newed for  one  yeare  more. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  servants  of  both  howses  shall  haue  twenty  shil- 
lings allowed  them  each  howse  for  theire  attendance  on  the  Courte. 
[*159.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Tho  Wiggin  and  Majo""  Gennerall  Dennison, 

Who  to  keepe  yfth  ]\^jr  Dm^gr  and  M'  Cleoments,  associates  for  the  county  of  Norfolke,  shall 

y  County  ri   t 

Courts  at  Nor-  keepe  the  next  County  Courts  at  Hampton  and  Salisbury  for  this  yeere. 

*^°"^''"  Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Deputy  Gouernor,  M'-  Hibbins,  M'  Glouer,  and  the 

Comittee  to  __ 

pvse  y  lawes.    secretary,  ]\I''  Hills,  or  any  two  of  them  w"^  the  secretary,  shall  be  a  comittee 

to  examine  the  lawes  that  past  this  Court. 
Old  booke  to  Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary  shall  take  care  that  the  old  booke  of 

be  transcnbe  .  j.gp^Qj.^jg  ghallbe  fairely  written  out,  for  which  he  shall  haue  sattisfaccon  by  the 

page,  as  the  Coiut  allowes. 
Coniissioners  A  bill  of  charges   for  the  expences   of  the  coiiiiissioners  going  to  and 

WeuT&c^        coming  from  Wells,  &5,  in  July  last,  being  presented  to  this  Court,  of  twenty 
allowed.  eight  pounds  thiiteene  shillings  &  three  pence,  the  Court  allowes  thereof,  and 

orders  the  Treasurer  to  make  sattisfaccon  for  the  same  out  of  the  next  levy, 

it  being  for  mony  lajd  out. 


R 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  181 


Ati  a  Gcnncrall  Court  of  Eleccons,  held  at  Boston,  the  3d  of       10  54. 

May,  1654.  ' ^ — ' 

3  May. 

ICH:  BELLINGILIM,  Es^",  was  chosen  GoQii^  &  tooke  Hs  oatli  ac-     [*160.] 

cordingly. 

Jn"  Eudecott,  Es^,  was  chosen  Depu'  GoQ',  &  tooke  his  oath  accordingly. 
M'  Increase  Nowell, 
M''  Symon  Bradstreete, 
M'  W-"  Hibbins, 
M"^  Samuel  Symonds, 
Capt  Robert  Bridges, 
Cap?  Tho  Wiggins, 
Capt  Daniell  Gookin, 
Major  Daniell  Denuison, 
Major  Symon  Willard, 
Capt  Humphry  Atherton, 
M'^  Edward  Eawson  was  chosen  Secritary. 
M"'  Richard  Russell  was  chosen  Treasiu-er, 
M''  Symon  Bradstreet 


•  were  chosen  Asistants,  and  tooke  theii-e  oathes. 


^     ^  ,„     -r^      ,  I  were  chosen  Comissioners  for  the  Collonies. 

Capt  W""  Hauthorue,  J  ■* 

Major  Dennison  &  y'^  Dep'  GoQno'",  in  reserve. 

The  names  of  such  as  were  retourned  from  the  seuerall  tounes  to  serve 
at  this  Gennerall  Court  as  Deputjes  are  as  foUowetli :  — 

Salem :  M'  W""  Broune,  M"^  Henry  Bartholmew. 

Charles  Tow :  M'  Rich  Russell,  Capt  Frauncis  Norton. 

Dorchester :  Left  Roger  Clap,  M"'  Ju°  Wisewall. 

Boston :  Capt  Tho  Sauage,  Capt  Tho  Clarke. 

Roxbuiy  :  W  AV^  Parks,  M--  Phillip  Elliot. 

Water  Tonne  :  M"'  Rich  Broune,  M'^  Ephrajm  Child. 

Lynn :  James  Aixey. 

Cambridge :  M"^  Edw:  Collins,  M''  Edw:  Jackson. 

Ipswich :  M"'  George  Gittings,  M'  Joseph  Metcalfe. 

Newbery  :  M"^  Jn"  Saunders. 

Welmouth :  Tho  Dyer. 

Hiugham :  Capt  Josh  Hubbard,  Ensig  Jef  Houchin. 

Concord :  Majo'  Symon  Willard. 

Dedham  :   Capt  Eliazer  Lusher. 

Salisbuiy :  Thomas  Masy. 


182  THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

Hampton :  Anthony  Stanjon. 

Rowley  :  Joseph  Jewett,  Maximilljan  Jewett. 

Sudbury :  Edmond  Rice. 

Biauntry :   Samuell  Basse. 

Doner  :  Cap?  Rich  Waldernes,  M''  Vallentjne  Hill. 

Portsmouth :  Cap?  Brjan  Pendleton. 

Woobourne :  Capt  Edward  Johnson. 

"Wenham  :  M"'  Charles  Gott. 

Hauerill :  M"^  Jn°  Cleoments. 

Maiden  :  M'^  Joseph  Hills. 

Kittcry :   Lef !  Ju°  Wincoll. 

Yorke  :  M"^  Edw:  Rushworth. 

Wells :  Hugh'Guunison. 

M"'  Richard  Russell  was  chosen  Speaker  for  this  session. 

[*161.]  *Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  henceforth  the  secretary  shall,  within 

The  lawes  to     tcnn  dajes  after  this  present  sessions,  and  so  from  time  to  time,  deliuer  a  copie 

be  printed. 

of  all  lawes  that  are  to  be  published  vnto  the  president,  or  printer,  who   shall 

forthwith  make  an  jmpression  thereof,  to  the  noumber  of  five,  six,  or  seven 

hundi'ed,  as  the  Court  shall  order  ;  all  which  coppies  the  Treasurer  shall  take 

of  and  pay  for  in  wheate,  or  otherwise,  to  content,  for  the  noumber  of  five 

hundred,  after  the  rate  of  one  penny  a  sheete,  or  eight  shillings  a  hundred  for 

five  hundred  sheetes  of  a  sorte,  for  so  many  sheetes  as  the  bookes  shall  con- 

tejne ;  and  the  Treasurer  shall  distribut  the  bookes,  to  euery  magistrate  one, 

to  euery  Court  one,  to  the  secretary  one,  to  each  toune  where  no  magistrate 

dwells  one,  and  the  rest  amongst  the  tonnes  that  beare  publicke  charge  w* 

the  juiisdiccon,  according  to  the  noumber  of  freemen  in  each  toune  ;  and  the 

order  that  jngageth  the  secretary  to  transcribe  coppies  for  the  tonnes  and  others 

is  in  that  respect  repealed,  this  Court  allowing  him  tenn  pounds  this  yeere 

only,  in  respect  of  w'  bennefit  hcereby  is  w"'drawne  fi'om  him. 

Comittee  about  And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  ^1"  Samuell  Symonds,  Majo""  Dennison,  & 

e  awes.         -^^^  Joseph  Hills  shall  examine,  compare,  reconcile,  and  place  together,  in  good 

order,  all  former  lawes,  both  printed  and  written,  and  make  fitt  titles  and  tables 

for  ready  recourse  to  any  particular  conteined  in  them,  and  to  present  the  same 

vnto  the  next  Court  of  Eleccbn,   to  be  considered  of,   that  so  order  maybe 

taken  for  the  printing  of  them  together  in  one  booke,  whereby  they  be  more 

vsefull  then  now  they  are  or  cann  be. 

Education  of  Forasmuch  as  it  greatly  concernes  the  welfare  of  this  countrjc  that  the 

youths.  youth  thereof  be  educated,  not  only  in  good  litterature,  but  sound  doctrjne. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  183 

this  Court  doth  therefore  comeiid  it  to  the  serious  considoratjou  and  spcciall 
care  of  the  ouerseeres  of  the  colledge  and  the  selectmen  in  the  seuerall  tonnes, 
not  to  admitt  or  suffer  any  such  to  he  contjnewed  in  the  office  or  pLace  of  teach- 
ing, educating,  or  instructing  of  youtii  or  chikt  in  the  colledge  or  schooles  that 
haue  mannifestcd  themselves  vnsound  in  the  faith  or  scandalous  in  theire  liues, 
and  not  giving  due  sattisfaction  according  to  the  rules  of  Christ. 

Yppon    observation    of  many  and  great  inconveniencjes  by  this  Courts  Time  of  entry 
taking  in  of  peticons  which  are  presented  from  tjme  to  tjme,  not  only  in  the  "! Gcnn" r**!!" 
begining   but   often   tjmes   towards   the   close   of   the   Court,  itt   is  therefore  Court, 
ordered,  by  this   Court  and  the   authoritje  thereof,  that   from   henceforth  no 
petiGon  vvhatsoeuer  shallbe  received  into  the  Genuerall  Court,  after  the  first 
fower  dajes  of  the  Court  of  Election,  nor  after  the  first  weeke  of  all  other 
sessions,  from   tjme  to  tjme,  any   lawe  or  custome  to  the  contrary  notwith- 
standing. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  no  pson  whatsoeuer  in  this  jurisdiccon  shall  henceforth  Clarke  & 


mar- 


beare  or  mannoge  both  offices  of  clarkc  and  marshall  in  one  Court.  teln  one  p°on 

Whereas,  in  the  coinissions  for  captajnes  of  troopes  of  horse,  the  capt  is  officers  of 
subjected  to  the  coiiiand  of  tlic  majo''  gennerall  and  other  superior  officers,  bv  '»'"'^''''»''J<'<='<"1 

■*■  '      -^    to  y«  majors  of 

*  superior  officers,'  this  Court  declares  to  be  vnderstood  the  majo''s  of  the  seu-  y'  regiments. 
crall  regiments  in  the  respective  countjes. 

*Forasmuch  as  the   countrje  is  in   debt,  no   stocke   in  the  treasury,   no      [*163.] 
meanes  at  present  to  raise  any,  so  that  workemen  cannot  be  procured  to  finish  Reparation  of 

tliG  C&stle 

the  Castle,  w"^*"  yett  is  necessary  forthw""  to  be  donne,  itt  is  therefore  ordered, 
that  the  millitary  companjes  of  the  twelve  next  toiuies,  viz.,  Hull,  Hingham, 
Weimouth,  Braintree,  Dedham,  Dorchester,  Rocksbury,  Charles  Toune,  Cam- 
bridge, Water  Toune,  Maulden,  and  Woobourne  shall,  in  Icjw  of  theire  fower 
next  trayning  dajes,  allow  three  dajes  at  the  Castle,  this  soiTier,  to  be  ordered  for 
theire  tjme  of  attending  that  service,  place  of  working,  and  the  noumbers  to 
be  jmplojed  at  one  tjme  by  the  coiiiittee  for  the  Castle,  viz..  Major  Edward 
Gibbons  and  Capt  Humphry  Atherton,  who,  together  w"'  the  chcife  millitary 
officer  of  the  company  implojed,  shall  order  and  direct  theire  seuerall  im- 
plojments,  and  that  all  the  rest  of  the  companjes  in  this  jurisdiccon  shall  allows 
for  euery  souldjer  in  theire  respective  companjes  fower  shillings  and  sixepence, 
to  be  jmplojed  &  iniprooved  about  or  vppon  the  sajd  Castle,  for  v,-"^  they 
shallbe  exempted  from  theire  fower  next  trayning  dajes,  (Boston  only  to  be 
excepted,)  whom  this  Court  concludes  will  not  suffer  any  of  theire  neighbo''^ 
to  exceede  or  a;quallize  them  in  this  kinde,  they  having  this  spring  bestowed 
&  expended  much  for  the  fortifying  the  toune  of  Boston. 

Whereas  experienc  hath  manifested  some  inconvenience  in  the  interpre- 


184 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1654. 

■ — 1 — ■ 

3  May. 


Difficult  cases 
jipci-  to  y  cog- 
nizance of  the 
Gennerall 
Court. 


[*163.] 


All  dues  be- 
loii2:ing  to  y 
coxinty  to  be 
entrcd  into  a 
booke. 


All  fines  jm- 
posnd  by  ma- 
gis**  or  coiiiis- 
sio"  to  be  p^ 
into  the  county 
treasury. 


tacon  of  the  lawe,  title  Appeales,  the  second  printed  booke,  page  1,  wherein 
it  is  expressed  that  all  appeales  shallbe  accompted  in  the  natiue  of  a  writt  of 
error,  ■which  is  vnderstood  to  intend  the  revoaking  the  whole  judgment  of  the 
former  Coiut,  though  but  a  parte  of  it  be  found  only  defective,  and  so  thereby 
a  pson  and  case,  which,  in  respect  of  the  substance  of  it,  is  just  and  righteous  in 
itselfe,  and  in  the  apprehencon  also  of  the  judges  appealed  vnto  doth  so  appeare, 
yett  maybe  cast  and  condemned,  and  the  nocent  party  acquitted,  to  the  dishon- 
nor  of  God,  reproach  of  justice,  greiving  the  innocent,  and  incouraging  wrong 
doers,  the  Court  doth  therefore  order,  that  in  all  cases  of  appeales  the  Court 
appealed  vnto  shall  judge  the  case  according  to  former  evidence,  and  no  other, 
rectifying  what  is  amisse  therein ;  and  where  matter  of  fact  is  found  to  agree 
w""  the  former  Court,  and  the  judgment  according  to  lawe,  not  to  revoake  the 
decree  or  judgment,  but  to  abate  or  increase  damages  as  is  apprehended  to  be 
just,  any  lawe,  cnstome,  or  vsage  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Forasmuch  as  dayly  experience  tells  vs  that  the  proceedings  of  this  Courte 
are  constantly  obstructed  through  the  introducing  of  seuerall  particcular  cases 
of  a  private  nature,  the  worke  of  this  Courte  being  propperly  to  attend  mat- 
ters of  a  more  publicque  concernment,  this  Court  doth  therefore  order,  that  no 
Court  shall  transferr  the  cases  coming  before  them,  *propper  to  the  cognizance 
of  such  a  Court,  whither  they  are  civill  or  crjminall ;  but  if  there  be  difficulty 
in  any  case,  the  Court  shall  state  the  question,  leaving  out  the  partjes  names, 
and  bring  it  to  the  Gennerall  Court,  where  it  maybe  resolved  ;  and  the  Court 
or  Courts  that  shall  so  state  difficult  cases  shall  suspend  theire  judgment  of  the 
case  till  the  Coiut  doth  meete  againe  ;  which  Court,  vppon  the  resolution  of 
the  Gennerall  Court,  may  proceed  to  judgment  or  sentence. 

For  the  better  settling  of  all  county  charges  and  proffitts,  that  all  com- 
plajnts  in  that  kinde  maybe  remooved,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the 
authoritje  thereof,  1.  First,  that  the  recorder  or  clarke  of  any  County  Court 
w"^in  this  jurisdiccon  shall  enter  in  a  booke  of  accompts  for  that  county  all  the 
dues  arising  w"'in  the  cognizance  of  that  County  Court,  by  entring  of  actions, 
fines,  or  otherwise,  and  also  a  true  accom^it  of  all  the  expences  of  the  Court 
and  the  ffees  of  the  officers.  2.  That  all  magistrates  and  coiiiissioners  that  haue 
power  to  jmpose  fines  w^'in  the  Ijmitts  of  theire  respective  countjes  and  tounes 
shall  give  warrant  vnto  the  marshall  of  that  county,  or  couustable  of  that 
toune,  where  such  magistrate,  or  coiiiissioner,  or  delinquent  shall  reside,  to 
levy  such  fines  as  shallbe  so  imposed,  who  shall  also  faithfully  pay  in  the  same 
to  that  county  Treasurer,  and  likewise  that  such  magistrate  and  coiiiissioner 
shall  also  give  in  a  true  transcript  of  all  such  fines  as  they  shall,  according  to 
the  power  comitted  to  them,  impose  vppon  any  person,  to  the  clarke  of  such 


TIIE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  185 

County  Court,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  that  so  there  maybe  a  true  accompt  kept      1654. 
of  all  the  proffitts  &  expences  arising  w"'in  the  county.     3.  That  the  ffreemen  '^       ' 

of  each  county  shall   choose  a  Tresiu-er  for  theire  county  annually,  vppon  the  „,   .      , 
last  third  day  of  June,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  in  theire  seuerall  tonnes  w"'in  this  county 

Treasurers. 
jurisdiccon,  and  that  by  proxie,  sealed  vp,  as  is  vsuall  in  the  choice  of  other 

officers,  and  that  the  sajd  proxies,  so   sealed,   shallbe  sent  by  a  coiiiissioner, 

chosen  for  that  end,  to  each  sheire  tonne  the  next  day  fFollowing,  there  to  bo 

opened  before  some  magistrate,  if  dwelling  there,  or  in  defect  thereof  before 

the  three  coinissioners  for  the  sajd  toune,  who  shall  and  hereby  are  injoyned 

to  signify  to  the  seueral  tonnes  who  is  chosen. 

4.    That  the  clarke  of  the  County  Court,  w^'in  fowerteene  dajes   after  Clarks  to  cer- 
euery  Court,  shall  deliuer  to  the  Treasurer  of  each  county  a  true  transcript  ^^^^  If  ^ji  ^^"^ 
out  of  his  booke  of  all  fjnes  and  dues  payable  to  the  county.  '""''■'  i*  ''"J^^- 

That  all  the  charges  of  County  Courts  and  sheire  comissioners,  w""  all  All  charges  of 
other  peculiar  county  charges,  shall  be  pajd  by  the  county  Treasurer,  except-  j^  J^^.  jefraje/ 
ing  the  twenty  pounds  due  to  the  majo"  of  the  county  for  the  yeare  of  his  ^y  '■^^  county. 
publicke  exercise,  which  the  countrje  Treasurer  shall  pay  as  heeretofore. 

6.    That  the  county  Treasurer  shall  once  cuery  yeere  present  his  accompt  County 
to  the  County  Court,  and  if  there  be  not  enough  in  his  hand  to  sattisfy  the    j^g  annuali 
chai'ges  aforesajd,  peculiar  to  the  county,  the  County  Court  shall  give  liim  a  '"=co«>pts. 
warrant  for  the  levying  the  areares  of  the  county  vppon  the  Avhole  county,  by 
a  county  rate  to  be  levyed  vppon  each  toune  and  pson,  except  such  as  are 
rate  fi'ee,  in  proportion  w**"  the  countije  rate  next  before  going,  and  to  be 
gathered  by  the  counstable  of  each  toune,  who  is  heereby  injoyned  to  attend 
the  same. 

*7.    That  all  fines  and  dues  any  otherwise  arising  w^'in  the  cognizance      [*164.] 
of  the  Gennerall  Court  or  Court  of  Asistants,  the  secritary  or  clarke  of  the  ■*"  ^°''^ """ 

posed  to  be  cer- 

Court  shall  in  like  manner  retourne  a  true  transcript  thereof  to  the  auditor  tified  to  the 
gennerall,  to  be  pajd  into  the  countrje  Treasurer. 

That  the  country  Treasurer  shall  sattisfy  all  the  charge  arising  w'^'in  the 
cognizance  of  the  Gennerall  Court  and  Coui't  of  Asistants  that  is  not  yett 
determined  by  any  foimer  lawe. 

9.    That  euery  Treasurer,  whither  for  the  countrje  or  county,  w"'in  one  Fines  to  be 

levyed  w"'in 

weeke  after  the  receipt  of  a  transcript  of  any  fine  or  poenaltje,  payable  to  his  one  weeke. 
office,  shall  direct  his  warrant  to  the  marshall  of  that  countje,  or  any  coun- 
stable, for  the  levying  thereof. 

That  no  officers,  whither  secritary,  treasurer,  recorder,  marshall,  or  con-  PoDnaltje  of 

o^&ccrs  neglect 

stable,  neglect  his  duty,  heereby  enjoyned,  vppon  poenaltje  of  making  good  of 
all  the  damage  that  shall  come  thereby. 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  24 


186  THE  KECORDS  OE  THE  COLONYf  OF 

1  G  5  4.  That  the  conntrje  Treasurer,  and  each  county  Treasurer,  for  his  pajnes 

'^       ^    and  service  in  collecting  and  paying  in  theire  respective  places,  shallbe  ratefree, 

„        .  .'        both  in  couutrje  and  countje  rates,  and  take  one  sliilling  in  the  pound  for  all 

f^es.  lines  received  by  him. 

Charles  Touue  Vppon  information  of  the  great  inconviencjes  to  diuerse  inhabitants,  by 

Court  dayes.  j^eanes  of  the  vnseasonable  weather  that  vsually  hath  attended  the  tjme  of  the 
Court  at  Charles  Toune,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  henceforth  the 
Court  dajes  at  Charles  Toune  appointed  in  January  shallbe  on  the  third  day 
of  the  last  weeke  in  December,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  any  thing  in  the  sajd  order 
notw"'standing. 

Comittee  of  Vppon  occasion  of  a  qunestion  concerning  the  power  of  coiiiittes  of  militja 

miiitjai"  ^^^  j,j^g  seuerall  tonnes,  constituted  27  of  May,  1652,  itt  is  by  this  Court  de- 

powers  to  sup-  '  J  ^  '  J 

presse  levying   clared,  that  the  coiiiittee  of  militia  in  the  seuerall  townes  hath  power  to  suppresse 

of  souldjers, 

&c.  all  raising  of  souldjers  but  such  as  shallbe  by  authoritje  of  this  gouernment. 

Further  tjme  to  There  being  a  coiiiittee  appointed  the  last  yecre  for  the  auditting  of  the 

Treasurers  Treasurers  accompts,  which  is  not  yett  effected,  by  reason  the  counstable  of 
accorapts.  ^j^^  seuerall  tonnes  haue  not  yett  cleared  theire  respective  rates,  itt  is  there- 
fore ordered,  that  further  time  shall  be  given  for  auditting  the  sajd  accompts, 
vntill  what  is  yett  remayning  vnpajd  from  the  countrje  be  brought  in,  pro- 
vided it  be  donne  before  the  next  session  of  this  Court,  and  a  due  retourne 
made  of  the  same  at  theire  next  sitting. 
Ans'  to  Maha-  lu  ans''  to  the  pcticou  of  Mahalalel  Munnings,  attourney  for  his  father, 

Edmond  Munings,  the  Court  judgeth  meete  that  the  wharfe  of  George  Halsall, 
w^all  the  rights  and  priviledges  therevnto  belonging,  be  deliuered  into  the 
hands  of  the  sajd  Mahalaljell  Munnings  by  the  marshall,  vntill  the  whole  ex- 
ecution of  thirty  seven  pounds  odd  niony  be  fully  sattisfied  out  of  the  profKtts 
of  the  sajd  wharfe,  together  w*''all  damages  and  forbearance,  according  to  lawe, 
or  the  sajd  Halsall  shall  take  some  other  way  for  the  sattlsfaction  of  the  debt. 
"Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  fifth  day  of  this  month  be  sett  apart  for  the  hear- 
ing of  all  ciuill  or  crhninall  ^  wherein  the  Magis'*  &  jury  did  not  agree. 
[*165.]  *The  Court,  on  pvsall  of  the  retourne  of  the  coiiiittee  appointed  to  con- 

Courts  aj)ba-     sider  of  eolledge  buisenes,  doe  judge  that  the  tenn  pounds  brought  in  vppon 

tjon  of  y«  _  i-  •  1  •  i-  1 

coraittees  re-  accompt  by  the  president  of  the  eolledge,  for  his  care  and  pajnes  for  these 
"ii'T  '^""'^  ^  twelve  yeeres  last  past,  in  looking  after  tlie  affaii'es  of  the  eolledge,  in  respect 
of  building,  repayring,  or  otherwise,  be  respitted  till  this  Court  take  further 
order  therein  ;  and  that  the  contributions  and  subscriptions  lately  given  in,  or 
which  sliall  heereafter  be  given  in  by  seuerall  tonnes  and  persons,  together 
w"^  all  other  stocke  appertayning  to  the  eolledge,  shallbe  coiuitted  to  the  care 
and  trust  of  the  oucrseeres  of  the  sajd  eolledge,  Avho  haue  heereby  power  to 


lr.ljcll  Mun- 
nings peticon. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  187 

give  order  to  the  treasurer  of  the  colledge  to  collect  the  seuerall  subscrip- 
tions &  contributions  which  arc  or  shallbe  heereafter  due  from  tjnie  to  tjme  ; 
and  ill  case  of  non-pajmcnt  thereof,  that  it  be  secured  by  the  seuerall  tonnes 
and  psons,  so  long  as  it  shall  remajne  vnpajd,  and  the  produce  of  it  to  be  pajd 
to  the  sajd  Treasurer,  and  to  bo  for  the  maintenance  of  the  president  and  ffel- 
lowes,  and  other  necessary  charges  of  the  colledge,  and  the  seuerall  yeerely 
allowance  of  the  sajd  president  &  fellowes  to  be  proportioned  as  the  sajd  ouer- 
seers  shall  determine  concerning  the  same. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  M'  Jn°  Mauericke,  the  Court,  on  the  pvsall  of  Answ  to  Jn» 
the  evidences  of  Moses  Mauericke  &  George  Coruin,  that  howeuer  the  bill  of  petiEon. 
sale  runns  in  the  name  of  James  Astwood,  yet  it  was  only  in  trust  for  the  vse 
of  Jane  Mauericke,  wife  of  the  sajd  Jn",  doe  therefore  judge  it  meete  to  im- 
power  W™  Phillips  to  canccU  that  deed,  and  orders  the  recorder  of  the  county 
to  reverse  the  reccord  of  it ;  and  further  orders  the  sajd  W"  Phillips,  having 
been  pajd  for  the  howse  &  land  in  y°  peticSn  menconed,  to  make  a  firme  deed 
of  sale  thereof  to  the  sajd  Jn"  ]Mauericke  and  his  heires  foreiier,  according  to 
lawe. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  the  inhabitants  of  Hampton,  the  Court  doth  de-  Courts  ans'  to 

«         1  1        T/r  Hampton  pet. 

clare,  though  they  are  not  willing  to  recall  those  vncomiortable  ditterences  jespcc'  M' 
that  formerly  passed  betwixt  this  Court  and  M'^  Wheelwright  concerning  mat-  ^^  hceiewnght, 
ters  of  religion  or  practise,  nor  doe  they  know  w'  INI""  Rutherford  or  M"'  Wells 
hath  charged  him  w"",  yett  judge  meete  to  certify  that  M''  Wheelewright  hath 
long  since  given  such  sattisfactlon  both  to  the  Court  and  ciders  gennerally  as 
that  he  is  n\DW,  and  so  for  many  yearcs  hauc  binn,  an  officer  in  the  church  ol 
Hampton,  w"'iu  our  jurisdiccon,  and  that  w"'out  offence  to  any,  so  farre  as  wee 
know,  and  where,  as  wee  are  informed,  he  hath  binn  an  vsefull  and  proffitable 
instrument  of  doing  much  good  in  that  chiu'ch. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Anthony  Fisher,  desiring  the  remittment  of  y*  Ahs'  to 

,,,...,  Antho  Fishers 

fine  y^  law  imposeth  on  him  for  his  neglect  of  seasonable  bringing  m  the  votes  ^^^ 

of  Dedham  to  y"  sheire  tonne,  it  not  being  wilfuU,  the  Court  judgcth  it  meete 

to  abate  all  y'  fine,  excepting  twenty  shillings,  besides  the  pajmcnt  of  tenn 

shillings  for  his  peticon. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  y"^  selectmen  of  Watertoune,  as  also  of  the  pe-  Ans'  to  Water- 

,  ,  ,  Toune  peti- 

ticbn  of  Xtopher  Graunt  &  other  inhabitants,  the  Court  doth  order  and  ap-  j^^^ 
pointe  Majo''  Simon  Willard,  M"^  Edward  Jackson,  &  M"^  Thomas  Dauforth,  as 
couiissioners,  to  meete  at  Watertoune,  w""  full  power  to  heare,  consider,  and 
determine  the  matters  in  difference  betweene  the  partjes  menconed  in  the  pe- 
ticons,  and  to  set  such  order  therein  as  to  them  shall  seeme  just  and  fequall,  and 
make  retourne  of  theire  order  or  agreement  therein  vnto  the  next  sessions  of 
this  Court. 


188  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


12  May. 

[*166.J 

12:3: 


1654.  *Iii  fills'"  to  the  coniplajnt  of  Robert  Lord,  marsliall  of  Ipsulcli,  presented 

to  this  Court  in  reference  to  the  levying  of  an  execution  graiinted  at  Ipswich 

Court  to  ^i'  Jn"  Gj^ord,  against  the  estate  of  M''  Jii"  Becks  &  Company,  of 

the  iron  works,  the  whole  Court,  voating  together,  did  determine  and  resolve, 

Contradicen-     that  Robert  Lord,  marsliall  of  Ipswich,  did  proceede  legally  in  levying  the 

^^  r.^n^"j,"j   personall  estate  of  M"^  Henry  Webb,  of  Boston,  by  virtue  of  his  execution. 

linghara,  Esq',  jj^^  {]^g  gg^gg  pf  Robert  Lord,  marshall,  &  Jn°  Merrja'n,  in  reference  to  the 

GoU  ;  Increase 

Noweil,  w»  land  sometjmes  Nathaniell  Boulters,  w*  came  to  the  Gennerall  Courts  cog- 
Brid^esTho  nizaiice  by  course,  the  Magis'^  not  receiving  the  verdict  of  the  jury,  the  Court 
Wiggin,  Dan-   ^q([^  iudare  that  the  marshalls  execution,  and  that  by  virtue  thereof  his  interest 

iellGookin,  •>       °  _  >  J 

linmpiiry         on  the  behalf  of  the  countrje,  was  legall,  and  doe  therefore  declare,  that  all  for- 

AthertoTi,  .  .  ^,  ,  ,  iii'iri 

Rich.  KnsscU  ^''^^r  judgments  m  any  Court  ought  to  be  reversed,  aiiji  the  title  oi  the  sajd 
Tho.  Sauage,     ]\j[arian  shall  be  made  good.    The  Court  graunted  Robert  Lord  his  bill  of  costs, 

Roge'Clap,  J  o  o  ) 

Tho.  Macy,  being  three  pounds  five  shillings  &  4'*. 

Edw.  Rush-  The  Court,  vppon  hearing  of  the  case  betweene  Robert  Lord,  marsliall. 

Child '■Tho'''  ^"'^  ^^'^  Webb,  vppon  the  quasstion,  whither  M""  Webb  be  such  an  owner  or 

Clarke,  W»  vndertaker  of  the  iron  workes  as  makes  his  pson  or  psonall  estate  Ijable  to  the 
judgment  of  Ipswich  Court  against  the  sajd  ouners  or  vndertakers,  tlie  C'oiirt 

14-3  54  voted  it  on  the  negative. 

Cap'  Jn»sons  In.  ans"^  to  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Woobourne,  Capt  Edward 

comission  to  Johnsoii  is  appointed  &  impowred  to  marry  such  at  Woobourne  as  shall  be 

marry.  So.  '^  '■  '^  •' 

duely  published,  &  otherwise  fitt  to  joyne  in  marriage,  according  to  lawe. 
Left.Pomfretts  In  aiis""  to  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Doner,  Left  W""  Pomfrett  is 

comissio.  appointed  and  authorized  to  marry  such  at  Doner  as  shalll)o  ducl^^  published, 

&  otherwise  fitt  to  joyne  in  marriage,  according  to  lawe. 

M' Parks  power  AVhereas  51'  W™  Parkes  was  appointed  by  a  County  Courte  to  be  admin- 

concM'Ast-  Jsti-ator  to  the  estate  of  James  Astwood,  (his  widdow  refusing  the  same,)  did, 
woods  estate.  ^  °  j  y  ; 

by  order  of  the  sajd  Court,  make  sale  of  all  the  howses  and  lands  the  sajd 
James  Astwood  died  heere  possessed  of,  to  pay  the  credito'',  vpjion  his  request 
to  this  Court,  it  is  ordered,  that  his  sajd  acts  heerein  shall  be  good  in  lawe, 
and  is  heereby  confirmed  and  allowed,  which  shallbe  sufficyent  seciuitje  for  the 
purchaser  of  the  sajd  howses  and  lands. 
Joseph  Jewel  ^^  ^'i^'  to  y^  request  of  Majo""  Daniell  Dennison,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M"' 

&  Lef  Rim-      Joseph  Jewett,  Leftennant  Jn°  Rimingtoii,  and  Ensigne  Ilowlett,  or  any  two 

ington  to  lay  ^  '  o        >  D  '  .' 

out  Major  Den-  of  them,  shall  and  hereby  are  appointed  and  impowred  to  lay  out  the   sixe 

nisons  farme.      ,  ,       ,  n  t       ■,      t  ■       /-,  ^  - 1     nr   •       -r^         • 

hundred  acres  oi  land  tins  Court  graunted  to  y'  sd  JNlajo''  Dennison,  m  y* 
yeere  1651,  to  him  or  his  assignes,  adjoyning  to  the  westerly  bounds  of 
Rowley. 

In  ans'  to  y'  peticon  of  W™  Mills,  desiring  the  remlttment  of  the  fine 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  Jgg 

the  lawe  imposeth  on  him  for  giving  votes  for  the  Gouerno'^,  on  his  acknowl-      1  G  5  4. 
edgment  of  his  fault,  the  Coui't  judgeth  it  meet  to  abate  him  the  one  half    '       '       "" 
thereof,  viz.,  five  pounds.  ,,        ^^' 

'  '  ^  W"  Mills  to 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabittants  of  Lancaster,  itt   is   ordered,  P^X  5"  f«r  giv- 

1  1       •    1     1  •  !•   r  1  ft         •  (•  ing  in  votes  for 

that  the  inhabitants  of  Lancaster  haue  those  hbertjes  of  a  touneship  that  the  y  Goiino'. 
lawes  allow,  vntill  the  Gennerall  Court  take  further  order  therein;  and  that      [*1G7.] 
Lef!  Goodeuow  and  JVP  Thomas  Danforth  lay  out  the   bounds   of   the   said  ^'^"'^■''ster 

bounds  to  be 

touiie  according  to  the  Courts  graunt,  at  the  townes  charge,  and  make  retourne  lajd  out. 
thereof  vnto  tlie  next  Court  of  Election. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  W™  Page,  of  "Watertoune,  desiring  that  the  Page  his  assur- 
lands  he  purchased  of  Susan  Simson,  now  Parkhurst,  w"*"  he  hath  sattisfied 
for  long  since,  for  the  releiveiug  of  the  Sd  Susan  &  hir  chikb-en,  during  hir 
widdowhood,  itt  is  ordered,  that  a  deede  of  sale  be  made  according  to  lawe 
of  the  land,  in  y'  peticon  expressed  ;  and  that  George  Parkhurst  &  Susan,  his 
•wife,  signe  &  acknowledg  the  same,  and  that  the  sajd  deede  be  recorded,  •which 
donne,  shallbe  a  sufficyent  assurance  vnto  the  peticoner. 

In  aus"^  to  a  peticon  of  Hugh  Gunnison,  and  the  case  respecting  him  and  Courts  judg- 
Cap?  Shapleigh  and  the  late  Court  at  Yorke,  itt  is  ordered  and  hereby  de-  Gunnisons  & 
clared,  that  all  Hugh  Gunnisons  goods  shallbe  returned  to  him,  taken  a-way  by  .^"i"''  ^''^P' 

°  °  '  J      ■>    leighs  case. 

execution  or  replevin,  at  Cap?  Shapleighs  suite,  and  the  damage  and  costs  shall 
be  made  good,  according  to  the  judgment  of  Capt  Richard  Waldcrne  and  Wy 
Valentjue  Hill ;  if  they  cannot  agree,  they  are  to  choose  a  thirdman,  and  then 
to  determine  it  ;  and  that  any  person  concerned  in  any  civill  action  issued  in 
the  sajd  Court  shall  haue  libertje  of  appeale  as  well  as  if  it  had  binii  made  in 
Court,  provided  they  give  in  theire  reasons  as  the  law  requires,  and  giue  sixe 
dajes  suiiions  to  the  aduerse  pty ;  and  all  proceedings  in  criminall  cases  shall 
stand  firme,  a-quall  to  the  acts  of  all  other  Courts  of  judicature  of  like  power, 
any  exception  whatsoeuer,  made  or  to  be  made,  against  the  sajd  Coui't  or  the 
proceedings  thereof  notwithstanding  ;  and  that  the  county  of  Yorke  shall  beare 
the  charges  of  that  Court. 

In  the  case  about  Capt  Jacobsons  bark,  w"*"  was  refered   by  y®  County  Capt.  Jacob- 
Court  to  this  Courts  determination,  after  the  Court  had  vejwed  the  evidences  fejted. 
it  was  put  to  the  question,  whither  the  sajd  barke  be  forfeited  by  our  law  for 
trading  Avith  the  Dutch,  and  not  giving  caution  to  the  secritary  on  her  sayling 
from  thence  ;  itt  was  resolved  on  the  affirmatiue. 

The  Court,  having  read  and  diiely  considered  of  the  seuerall  papers  and  Courts  judg. 

.  .  .J  ment  in  the 

letters  presented  to  them  m  reierence  to  tlie  prizemen,  doe  not  judge  meete  to  case  of  the 
put  a  fiuall  issue  to  tlie  case  for  present,  in  regard  they  are  in  expectation  of  P"scmen. 
further  information  in  the  same,  both  from  England  and  Berbadoes,  and  doe 


190 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1654. 

Y 

14  May. 


Answer  to 
Hamptons 
peticon. 


16  May. 
Indians  land 
confirmed  to 
Tho.  Danforth. 

[*168.] 

Dorcas  Halls 
diuorce. 


Ans'  to  Jn» 

Chenys 

peticon. 


Hulls  deed  to 
White  con- 
firra'd. 


Ans'  to 
Lawrence 
Smiths 
peticon. 


Ans'  to 

Vnderwoods 

peticon. 


tlierefore  judge,  that  vppoii  the  tender  of  a  thousand  pounds  a  peace  securitje^ 
to  such  as  the  magistrates  shall  appolnte,  to  ans''  what  shallbe  objected  against 
them  before  the  counsell  or  Gennerall  Court,  when  they  shallbe  therevnto  re- 
quired, they  may  then  be  free  from  theire  imprisonment ;  this  securitje  to  con- 
tjuew  till  this  Court  or  the  counsell  shall  take  further  order  therein. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  toune  of  Hampton,  the  Court,  vnderstandiug 
that  the  case  is  depending  by  way  of  appeale  -vnto  the  Court  of  Assistants,  judge 
meete  that  it  be  left  therevnto. 

This  Court  allowcs  y"  Indians  deed  of  sale  of  y"  land  formerly  given 
them  by  this  Court  vnto  Thomas  Danforth,  being  eighty  acres,  as  in  y"  deed 
appeareth,  date  16 :  3  m°,  54. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Dorcas  Hall,  desiring  a  divorce  from  hir  hus- 
band, Jn°  Hall,  who  is  gonn  from  hir,  &d,  the  Court,  finding  it  fully  proved 
that  Jn"  Hall  hath  voluntarily  w^'draune  himself  from  Dorcas,  his  wife,  and 
contjnewes  in  his  obstinate  refusal  to  cohabit  w"'  hir  as  his  wife,  and  hath 
broken  the  bonds  of  wedlocke,  as  by  his  oune  confession,  attested  by  ^I''  W"' 
Coddington  &  W'"  Jeofferjes,  w"^  the  oath  of  Lawrence  Turner,  the  Court 
judgeth  it  meete,  that  the  sajd  Dorcas  shallbe,  &  hereby  declares  that  shec  is, 
legally  diuorced  from  the  sajd  Jn°  Hall,  and  is  at  hir  libertye  to  marry  w"' 
any  other  man. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Jn"  Cheny,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  hearing  of 
the  case  be  referred  to  that  session  of  the  Court  which  shallbe  in  the  end  of 
summer,  the  partjcs  concerned  therein  not  being  heere  to  attend  the  issue  of 
it  now,  and  that,  vppon  the  request  of  any  in  reference  to  the  case,  the  secri- 
tary  shall  giue  warrants  to  call  in  any  ptjes  or  wittnesses  which  canu  giuc 
evidence  therein. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Jn°  Hull  &  INIargaret,  his  wife,  there  being 
sufficjent  testemony  appearing  to  the  Court  that  the  evidences  of  the  land 
menconed  in  his  peticon,  sold  to  Jn°  White,  were  by  providence  of  God 
burned,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete,  that  the  deede  of  sale  for  the  house  and 
land  shallbe  made  good,  &  by  this  Court  confirmed  vnto  the  sajd  John  White 
and  his  heires  for  eu.er,  according  to  the  desires  of  the  psons  concerned 
therein. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Lawrence  Smith,  the  Court  declares,  the 
peticoner  hath  his  libertje  to  bring  his  cause  to  the  County  Court  or  Court  of 
Assistants,  if  he  see  meet,  judging  it  not  propper  to  the  cognisance  of  this 
Court. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  James  Vnderwood,  desiring  remittment  of  y* 
fine  the  Court  of  Salem  imposed  on  him  for  living  heer  w*''out  his  wife,  &(3, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    13AY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  191 

the  Court  judgcth  it  mcctc  to  rcspit  the  fine,  and  referr  the  examination  of  the      1654. 
testemonies  to  Salem  Court,  who  hauc  heereby  power  to  remitt  or  abate  the    "^      ^ 

.  .  11,-  UMay. 

fine  in  whole  or  in  pt,  as  the  justice  and  a3C[uity  of  the  case  shall  require. 

In  ans""  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Eoulcy,  the  Court  declares,  Ans'  to  Row 
that  the  petioncrs,  as  also  the  inhabitants  of  Ncwbcry,  ought  to  attend  and 
psecutc   the   order  of  Court  concerning  pambulation,  wherein  if  the  partjcs 
concerned  agree  not,  then  the  party  greived  may  releive  themselves   at  the 
County  Court. 

Ill  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  GofFe,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Treasurer  Ans'  to 
shall  &  hereby  is  desired  &  impowered  to  treat  w"^  the  sajd  Goffe,  and  audit  pj,t;joQ_ 
the  accounts,  and  accordingly  give   satisfaction  for  what  shall  be  found  clue 
to  him. 

In  ans''  to   the  peticon  of   Jn°  Ruddocke,   desiring   sattisfaccbn   for  his  Ans'  to  Jn» 
pauies  &  imployment  of  his  horse  on  y°  countjes  service  to  Couecticott,  itt  is  peticon. 
ordered,  that  the  peticoner  shall  haue,  vnder  the  hand  of  Capt  Leuerett  or 
Left   Davis,  what    is    due  to   him,  and  what  his  bill,  being  signed  by  the 
auditor,  it  shall  be  pajd  by  the  Treasurer. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Hauerill,  the  Court,  on  hear-  [*169.] 
ing  of  both  partjes,  doe  judge  it  meete  to  order  and  appointe  Henry  Short,  of  Ans'toHauer- 
Newbery,  Joseph  Jewett,  of  Rowley,  and  Jn"  Steevcns,  of  Andevor,  as  a 
coinittee  to  vejw  the  land,  examine  the  Courts  graunts  to  Hauerill  and  Salis- 
bury, the  agreement  of  the  tounes,  and  the  necessary  occasions  of  both  partjes 
in  respect  to  the  land  menconed  in  the  peticon,  and  to  retourne  theire  ap^- 
hencSns  thereof  to  this  Court. 

An  account  concerning  a  whale  taken  at  Weimouth  being  presented  to  Order  a"  y 
this  Courte,  itt  is  referred  to  the  auditor  gennerall  to  pervse  the  accompt,  and 
examine  what  is  due  to  the  countrje,  all  charges  being  deducted,  and  orders 
that  what  vppon  examination  shallbe  found  due,  the  countrje  shall  haue  one 
third  pte,  the  toune  of  Weimouth  another  third  pte,  and  the  finders  the  other 
third  pte. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Jn"  Barrell,  itt  is  ordered,  that  ||Vai  ||  Jn°  Whit-  sj'  Barrdis  & 
man  shall  be  allowed  fewer  shillings  a  day  for  his  paines  &  vse  of  his  horse  in    ^       "■'  ^ 

o  J  ^  J  recompence. 

y'  journey  he  was  implojed  in  for  the  countrjes  service  to  the  Narrowgansetts, 
and  that  Sarjant  Barrell  &  Saijant  Rich  Wajte  shall  be  allowed  three  shillings 
p  each  day  for  theire  paines  in  that  service,  the  auditors  appointed  to  take 
notice  of  it,  that  so  it  may  come  to  an  accompt  to  the  coUonjes. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Jn°  Ottis,  the  Corut  judgeth  it  meete  to  remitt  Ans'  to  Ja" 
all  the  fine  that  was  imposed  on  the  peticoner,  except  thirty  shillings,  twenty       '^  ^^  '°°"' 
whereof  to  belong  to  the  countrje,  and  teun  to  the  counstable,  so  as  the  peticoner. 


192 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1654. 


14  May. 

Tho.  Robbins 

refer' d  to 

Salem  Court. 

Ans'  to  M' 
Elljotts  peti- 
con  in  refer- 
enc  to  the 
Indjans. 
Nashoba,  &c*. 


Ans'  to  W" 
Wakes  peti- 
con,5i'  to  be 
p*  p'sently. 

Ans'  to  M" 
Stoughtons 
petiCou, 


[*170.] 

M'  Symonds 
lands,  800 
ackers,  to  be 
lajdout,  lie. 


Ans'  to  Greys 
petiCon. 


on  a  Lords  day  after  exercise,  or  on  some  piiblicke  assembling  of  the  congre- 
gation, make  like  full  acknowledgment  of  his  miscarriage,  as  he  hath  in  this 
peticon,  by  word  or  writing ;  or  otherwise,  shall  pay  w^'in  one  sixe  weekes 
five  pounds,  a  fine  to  the  countrje. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Thomas  llobbins,  bound  to  this  Court  &  coiTiitted  to 
the  marshall,  shallbe  referred  to  the  County  Court  of  Salem,  to  be  trjed  for  his 
entertayning  of  two  of  the  prise  prisoners  after  theire  escape  out  of  Boston 
prison,  for  five  dajes,  that  so  such  obstructors  of  justice  may  not  be  encouraged 
for  future  tjmes. 

In  ans'^  to  the  peticon  of  M"'  Jn"  Elliott,  on  behalf  of  seuerall  Indians, 
the  Court  graunts  his  request,  viz.,  liberty  for  the  inhabitants  of  Nashop  &  to 
the  inhabitants  of  Ogkoontiquonkanus,  and  also  to  the  inhabitants  of  Hasuem- 
esuchoth,  to  erect  seuerall  Indjan  tounes  in  the  places  profiounded,  w""  con- 
venjcnt  accoinodacbn  to  each,  provided  they  pjudice  not  any  former  grannts  ; 
nor  shall  they  dispose  of  it  w'^'out  leave  first  had  &  obtajned  from  this  Court. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  W"  Wake,  desiring  the  rcmittment  of  the  fine 
Imposed  on  him  for  not  going  home  to  his  wife,  itt  is  ordered,  that  all  his 
fine  shall  be  abated  him  to  five  pounds,  which  he  shall  pay  forthwith. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  M''^  Elizabeth  Staughton,  the  Court  judgeth  it 
meet  that  in  regard  the  riuer  at  Naponsett  is  hard  and  passable  for  horse  or 
cart  to  passe  through,  the  peticoner  be  injoj'iied  only  to  make  and  maintajne  a 
good  fibote  bridge  w""  a  good  rajle  to  it,  ouer  the  sajd  riuer,  any  former  engage- 
ment notw*standing. 

*Whereas  this  Court  hath  graunted  vnto  M''  Samuel  Symonds  five  him- 
drcd  ackers  of  land  the  last  yeere,  &  three  hundred  ackers  formerly,  w*  pro- 
viso to  sett  vp  a  saw  mill  w"'in  seven  yeares,  as  by  the  records  of  the  Court 
doth  appeare,  power  is  heereby  giuen  to  John  Gage,  Robert  Lord,  Jn°  Dane, 
and  M"'  Daniell  Epps,  or  any  two  of  them,  to  lay  out  the  same  in  some  free 
place  beyond  Merremacke  Riuer,  provided  no  part  thereof  shallbe  w'^'in  fiue 
miles  of  the  meeting  howse  of  Exiter.  And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  if  the 
sajd  Samuell  shall  rather  desire  to  haue  his  land  lajd  out  by  or  neere  vnto 
Majo""  Dennisons  land,  which  this  Court  hath  ordered  to  be  lajd  out  by  En- 
signe  Howlett,  Joseph  Jewet,  and  Left  Rimington,  or  any  two  of  them, 
power  is  heereby  given  vnto  the  sajd  coiSissioners  to  lay  out  his  full  quantity 
there,  or  so  much  of  it  as  he  thinks  meete  ;  and  the  proviso  cone  the  saw  mill 
is  taken  of. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  Jn"  Gray,  gunner  at  the  Castle,  the  Court  judg- 
eth it  meete  to  allow  the  peticoner,  for  his  service  in  that  place  for  the  time 
past,  at  the  rate  of  twenty  pounds  p  annu,  and  leave  it  to  the  capt  of  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  193 

Castle,  for  the  future,  to  make  an  agreement  w""  a  gunner,  so  that  it  exceede     1 G  5  4. 
not  twenty  pounds  p  annu.  "       f    "^ 

14  May 

In  ans""  to  the  peticons  of  y*  -widow  Elethrop,  Hush  Smith,  and  Jn°  Pick-  . 
erd,  the  Court,  on  a  hearing  of  the  case,  and  other  considerations,  doe  graunt  Ellethrope  & 

Jn"  Pickcrds  & 

the  probate  of  the  will  of  Thomas  Ellethrope  vnto  the  psons  named  in  the  petie. 
•will,  provided  they  give  securitje  unto  this  Court  that  in  reference  to  the  power 
menconed  in  the  sajd  will,  that  the  eldest  sonne  shall  haue  twenty  eight 
pounds,  and  the  three  youngest  children  twenty  pounds  a  peece,  there  being 
so  much  cleere  estate  remayniug  after  the  widdowes  thirty  povmds  and  all  debts 
hitherto  appearing  deducted  ;  but  if  the  cleere  estate  shall  rise  to  more  or  fall 
short  of  one  hundred  and  twenty  pounds  cleere  estate,  then  it  to  be  sequally 
distributed  amongst  the  fower  children. 

Whereas  wee  haue  certajne  intelligence  that  seuerall  shipps  are  on  the  sea.  Order  to  y 

.  .  capt.  of  y^ 

coming  to  vs,  whom  we  haue  cause  to  looke  at  as  our  freinds,  &  therefore,  Castic,  respect. 

though  they  should  come  in  together,  (w"'',  were  they  not  freinds,  might  justly  S'vmg  notice 

occasion  the  capt  of  the  Castle  to  giue  the  signall  for  raysing  an  alarmm,)  itt  ^c. 

is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  the   cap?  of  the  Castle  be  alwajes 

in  a  readjnes  to  man  out  a  boate  for  discouery  of  any  such  ships  as  may  ap- 

peare  in  due  tjme,  and  vppon  certajne  knowledge  that  they  are  freinds,  then 

to  forbeare  to  give  the  signall  of  alarmm  ;  but  if  otherwise,  to  act  according 

to   his    comission,  any    thing    in    any  former   lawe  to  the    contrary  notw"*- 

standing. 

*The  pouder  formerly  graunted  to  Charles  Toune  in  the  yeere  1650,  in     [*171.] 
reference  to  saluting  of  sliipps,  itt  is  ordered,  shallbe  deliuered  vnto  Capt  ^"""J"  ^'t''  to 

o  If  '  >  1      Charls  Toune 

Frauncis  Norton,  in  steede  of  Majo''  Sedjuke,  who  is  absent.  to  salut ships. 

The  Masris'%  not  receiving^  the  verdict  of  the  iury  in  the  case  of  Daniell  Courts  judg- 


m*  in 


Gunne  &  Alise  Cheater,  on  suspition  of  adultery,  it  came  of  coui-se  to  this  Gunn& 
Court  to  be  determined.  The  Court,  on  pvsall  of  the  deposicons  in  the  case, 
and  examination  of  the  sajd  AKse  Chater,  now  accused  for  coiuitting  of 
adultery  w""  Daniell  Gunne,  they  doe  not  find  them  to  be  guilty  of  the  fact 
according  to  lawe  ;  but  finding  hir  guilty  of  much  shamefuU  and  vnchast  be- 
havioiu-,  sentence  hir  to  be  seriously  admonished,  and  to  stand  tjed  ^  the 
whipping  post,  at  least  one  hower,  and  then  discharge  hir,  that  shee  may  repaier 
home  to  hir  husband ;  and  that  the  sd  Gunne,  when  he  is  recouered,  &  is 
capable  of  it,  shallbe  whipt.  The  Court,  vnderstanding  that  there  is  some 
hope  of  cure  for  y^  sajd  Gunne,  who,  tho  he  hath  binn  very  sinfuU  in  his 
life,  and  now  a  miserable  object,  yett  judge  y'  C*'tian  charitje  should  be  ex- 
tended by  the  countrje  for  his  preservation,  doe  order,  that  M''  Lunerus  be 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  25 


194  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1654.      iinplojed  for  his  cure,  and  sattisfied  by  the  Treasurer  for  the  present,  and  after 
■     r    — '    -vyards  the  charge  to  be  cast  on  such  as  this  Court  shall  determine. 

^^'  The  Court  havincr  receaved  seuerall    informations  of  many  grosse  and 

Courts  judg-  ° 

ment  to  bring  abusive  miscarriages  of  Edward  Colcord,  in  a  seeming  way  of  fraud,  which 
to  a  triaU,  &c.  (if  prooved  as  intended)  ought  to  be  duely  &  tjmely  wittnessed  against,  and 
meete  punishment  inflicted,  and  because  this  Court  would  not  be  wanting 
the  vse  of  all  due  meanes  for  the  discoverje  of  such  vile  practises,  itt  is  or- 
dered, that  the  secretary  shall  forthwith  graunt  out  attachment  against  the  sajd 
Edward  Colcord  in  the  sum  of  fifty  pounds,  binding  him  to  be  responsaU  to  the 
next  County  Court  at  Hampton  for  such  miscarriages  as  is  w'^in  mencbned,  and 
shall  then  be  proved  against  him  ;  and  for  that  end  this  Court  doth  heereby 
appointe  and  impower  the  recorder  of  the  County  Court  at  Hampton,  by  war- 
rant, to  send  for  all  such  partjes  as  haue  proffered  to  proove  the  w'Mn  men- 
coned  abuses  of  Edward  Colcord,  and  such  other  as  he  shall  be  informed  of 
cann  come  in  &  testify  against  the  sajd  Colcord ;  and  in  case  that  Court  cannot 
reach  to  due  punishment,  then  to  make  theire  retourne  to  the  next  Court  of 
Assistants  of  what  they  shall  finde,  that  so  due  justice  may  be  administered. 
Courts  ans'  to  In  ans''  to  the  peticbn  of  Hampton,  Salisbury,  Newbery,  Haverill,  &  An- 

Hampton,        devor,  subscribed  by  seuerall  in  each  toune,  this  Court  cannot  but  deepely  re- 
Salisbury,  'J  ^  r    J 

Newbery,  gent  that  SO  many   psons   of  seuerall  tounes,  condicons,  &  relations,  should 

Haverill,  &  i  •  o  i  i  i  i 

Andevor  peti-    combjne  together  to  p'sent  such  an  vnjust  &  vni-easonable  req^uest  as  the  revoak- 
'™-  iug  the  sentance  past  the  last  Court,  ag'  Left  Eobt  Pike,  &  the  restoring  of 

him  to  his  former  libertje,  w"'out  any  peticou  of  his  oune,  or  least  acknowledg- 
ment of  his  great  offence,  fully  prooved  against  him,  which  was  no  lesse  then 
defaming  this  Court,  and  charging  them  w"'  breach  of  oath,  &(3,  w"^"*  the  peti- 
coners  call  some  words  lett  fall  by  occasion.  The  Court  doth  therefore  order 
in  this  extraordinary  case,  that  INI"'  Bradstieet  for  Hauerill  &  Andevor,  Capt 
Wiggins  for  Hampton,  Capt  Gerrish  &  Nicho  Nojes  for  Neubery,  &  M' 
Winsly  &  M"'  Bradbury  for  Salisbury,  shall  &  heereby  are  appointed  coinis- 
sioners  to  call  the  sajd  peticoners  in  the  seuerall  tounes  together,  or  so  many 
of  them  at  a  tjme  as  they  shall  thinke  meete,  &  require  a  reason  of  theire  vn- 
just request,  &  how  they  came  to  be  induced  to  subscribe  the  id  peticon,  & 
so  make  theire  retourne  to  the  next  sessions,  that  the  Court  may  consider  how 
to  pceed  further  therein. 
[*172.]  *The  whole  Court  mett  together  to  consider  &  determine  at  present  w* 

further  to  doe  in  the  case  betweene  the  coiaissioners  for  the  yndertakers  of 
the  iron  works  &  M''  Gyfford.  Itt  was  put  to  the  quaestion,  whither  this 
Court  will  at  present  heare  the  case  betweene  the  coinissioners  of  the  iron 
works  &  M'  Gj-fford ;  itt  was  resolved  on  the  negative  quaes?,  whither  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  195 

case  of  the  coiuissioiicrs  for  tlic  vndertakers  of  the  irou  workes  &  M'^  Gyfford, 
being  referred  to  this  Geunerall  Court  by  the  County  Court,  whither  this  Court 
•will  accept  of  the  cawse  as  referrd  or  not.  The  Court  resolved  on  the 
negative. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  foureth  day  next  come  seven  night  shall  be  sett  Day  of  humili 

.    ■■.  ation. 

apart  &  kept  as  a  publicke  day  of  humilliatiou  thro  out  our  jurisdiccon. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  honnored  Gouernor,  the  secretary,  Capt  Clarke, 
and  M''  Hill,  or  any  tlii-ee  of  them,  shallbe  a  coinittee  to  pvse  &  vej-w  the  laws 
past  this  session,  according  to  former  order.  At  the  same  tjnie,  it  was  put  to 
the  quaestion,  whither  the  former  auditors  be  desired  &  impowered  by  this 
Court  to  finish  the  auditting  of  all  the  accompts  betweene  M"'  Gyfford  and 
the  comissioners  for  the  iron  works,  with  as  much  speed  as  they  cann.  The 
Court  voted  it  on  the  affirmative,  and  orders,  in  case  of  refusal,  the  County 
Court  to  appoint  some. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  if  the  seuerall  tounes  shaU  not  w*'^in  one  sixe  weekes  Secretarys 

,    ,  „   .  ,  »        ,     .  ,  .  ~  allowance  for 

send  doune  sunicjent  pay  to  the  secretary  lor  theire  seueral  proportjons  oi  pou-  pouder  pro- 
der  out  of  this  jurisdiccons  proportion  now  in  his  hands  to  his  content  in  "dedfor. 
wheate  or  pease,  he  shall  liaue  liberty  to  sell  it,  and  place  it  to  the  colonjes 
accompt,  &  that  the  secretary,  w"^  the  depu'=  of  Boston  and  Charlestoune,  shall 
proportion  w'  each  toune  may  have. 

The  Court  is  adjourned  to  the  seventeenth  of  October  next. 


J^  a    Gennerall    Court,  held  at  Boston,   9"'  of  June,  1654,   hewig 

called  by  the  Goulio'. 

THE  Gennerall  Court  having  receaved  &  pervsed  a  letter  from  his  highnes.  Courts  ans' 
the  Lord  Protector  of  the  commonwealth  of  England,  Scotland,  and  Ire-  ^J^^^^^^^^ 
land,  full  of  grace  and  favorable  respect  to  this  colony,  which  they  desire  to  letter, 
keepe  in  gratefull  remembrance,  and  shall  be  ready  at  all  tjmes  wherein  they 
may  w'*"  safety  to  the  libertye  of  theire  consciences,  publicke  peace,  &  welfare, 
to  theire  vtmost  attend  his  highnes  pleasure,  this  Court  therefore  declares,  that 
tho  they  vnderstand  that  this  colony  is  not  in  such  a  capacitje  as  may  be 
apphended  to  send  forth  such  noumbers  of  men  as  might  vigorously  asist  in 
that  vndertaking,  yet  doe  freely  consent,  and   give  libertje   to  his   highnes 
coinissioners,  Majo'  Robert  Sedgwick  and  Cap?  Jn"  Leueret,  to  raise  w^^in 
our  jurisdicc5n  to  the  noumber  of  five  hundi-ed  voluntires,  furnished  w^^aU 
necessary  accoinodacon  to  asist  them  in  theire  enterprise  against  the  Dutch, 
provided  the  psons  be  free  fi-om  legall  engagements. 


196 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1654. 

9  June. 

[*173.] 

Y"  order  re- 
specting agree- 
ment w'"^  the 
printer  not  to 
be  printed. 

Comittee  to 
draw  vp  ans'  to 
y  Protectors 
letter,  &c. 


Court  judg- 
ment in  y« 
prisemens 
ease. 


*Vppoii  conference  w""  M""  Dunster  and  the  printer,  in  reference  to  the 
imprinting  of  y'  acts  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  whereby  wee  vnclerstanci  some 
inconveniencjes  may  acrew  to  the  printer  by  printing  that  law  w"^*"  recjtes  the 
agreement  for  printing,  itt  is  thei'efore  ordered,  that  the  sajd  lawe  be  not  put 
forth  in  print,  but  kept  amongst  the  written  reccords  of  this  Court. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Symon  Bradstreete,  M'  Samuell  Symonds,  and 
Majo"^  Daniell  Dennison  shallbe  a  comittee  to  drawe  yp  seuerall  letters,  to  his 
highnes  the  Lord  Protectors  letter,  y  letter  for  y*  gent"  of  y"  corporation,  & 
M"^  Winslows,  as  also  to  drawe  up  a  narrative,  in  way  of  remonstrance,  of  all 
matters  respecting  that  which  is  charged  on  this  Court  concerning  the  breach 
of  the  confcederacy,  for  the  vindication  of  this  Courts  actjones  in  such  respect. 
And  itt  is  heereby  further  ordered,  that  the  place  of  meeting  for  the  comis- 
sioners  shallbe  at  Ipswich,  the  twentjeth  day  of  this  present  June,  and  the 
secretary  is  heereby  required  either  to  send  or  delluer  the  origlnall  copf»ies  of 
all  orders  and  writings  that  are  on  reccord,  or  are  in  his  hands,  ptinent  to 
the  matters  aforesajd,  to  one  of  the  sajd  coinissloners  before  the  sajd  tjme. 
And  the  coiulssioners  are  heereby  desired,  when  they  haue  finished  the  ans'^ 
and  narrative  above  menconed,  to  give  notice  thereof  to  the  Gouerno'^,  that  so 
he  may  call  the  Gennerall  Court  to  vejw  and  approove  of  them,  that  so  they 
may  be  sent  to  England  by  the  first  optunltje.  Cap?  Hauthorne,  y"  Treasurer, 
M"'  Joseph  Hills,  and  Capt  Johnson  are  appointed  to  doe  the  like,  &  to  haue 
the  like  helpes ;  the  Treasurer  to  appoint  y'^  place  of  meeting ;  the  time  to  be 
y*  thli-d  of  July  next. 

The  Court  judgeth  it  not  convenient  to  sltt  at  this  tjme  to  heare  the 
prisemens  case,  becawse  it  will  expend  much  tjme  to  reade  and  heare  all 
writtings  ptinent  in  it,  and  matters  not  being  fully  ripe  for  a  hearing  vntill 
the  case  of  the  shlpp  be  determined  in  England,  and  doe  therefore  referr  it 
vntil  the  next  sessions  of  this  Court,  and,  in  the  meane  tjme,  that  all  the  sajd 
psons  be  released  out  of  prison,  vppon  theire  oune  bonds,  the  cheifest  of  them 
giving  a  thousand  pounds  bond  a  peece,  and  the  other  five  hundred  pounds 
bond  a  peece,  provided  all  theire  knoune  estate  be  secured  in  the  marshalls 
hand  in  the  county  where  it  is  found,  excepting  so  much  as  may  be  for 
necessary  majntenance,  and  this  sequestration  to  contjnew  in  force  vntill  the 
case  concerning  the  sajd  prismen  be  fully  determined. 

This  Court  ordered  a  letter  to  be  sent  to  each  jurisdlccon  of  our  confced- 
erates,  which  was  in  ans'  to  theire  letters  receaved  in  May  Court,  w"^**  was 
donne  accordingly,  and  Is  in  y"  book  of  letters. 

In  ans"^  to  a  writing  p>sented  to  this  Court  by  M'  Hemy  Dunster,  where- 
in, amongst  other  things,  he  is  pleased  to  to  make  a  resignation  of  his  place  as 


9  Jane. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    EAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  197 

praesident,  this  Court  doth  order,  that  it  shall  be  left  to  the  care  &  discretion      16  54. 
of  the  ouerseeres  of  the  coUedge  to  make  provission,  in  case  he  persist  in  his 
resolution  more  then  one  month,  and  informe  the  ouerseers,  for  some  meete 
pson  to  caiTy  an  end  that  worke  for  the  present,  and  also  to  act  in  whateuer 
necessitje  shall  call  for,  vntill  the  next  session  of  this  Court,  when  wee  shallbe 
better  enabled  to  setle  what  shall  be  needfuU  in  all  respects  in  reference  to 
the  colledge,  and  that  the  ouerseers  *will  be  pleased  to  make  retoiu'n  to  this      [*174.] 
Court  at  that  tjme  of  what  they  shall  doe  heerein. 
This  Court  was  dissolved  12  June,  1654. 


Mt  a  Gennerall  Court,  called  especially  hy  the  Governor  to  receave    22  August. 
the  Corhittees  Retourne  in  reference  to  an  Ans"  to  the  Lord  Pro- 
tector's Letter  8f  other  Letters,  begimn  y"  22"'  August,  1654. 

ATT  which  Court  seuerall  letters  w-ere  agreed  vppon  as  answers  to  his 
highnes  the  Lord  Protectors  letter,  as  also  to  the  honored  corporation, 
and  to  M"'  Winslows,  all  w"^*"  are  in  the  booke  of  records  for  letters. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  lawe  Trade  wti>  y« 
made    in   May,   1653,    prohibitting    trade    with    the    Dutch,  be    henceforth  ^^J^ 
repealed. 

For  explication  of  the  order  concerning  payments,  it  is  by  this  Court  Lawe  for  pay- 
ordered  and  declared,  that  all  contracts  or  engagements  for  money,  come, 
catle,  or  fish  shall  be  sattisfied  in  kinde  according  to  couenant,  or,  in  default 
of  the  very  kind  contracted  for,  in  one  of  the  sajd  kinds ;  provided,  that  in 
such  cases  wherein  payment  in  kinde  is  not  made  according  to  couenant,  all 
just  damages  shallbe  sattisfied,  together  with  the  debt,  for  not  paying  in 
kinde  according  to  bargaine  ;  and  in  no  case  shall  any  creditor  be  forced 
to  take  any  other  coiuoditjes  for  sattisfaction  of  his  debt,  vuless  it  be  accord- 
ing to  his  contract,  but  it  shallbe  lawfull  for  such  creditor  to  imprison  the 
partje  till  he  make  sattisfaccon  according  to  couenant,  or  to  take  vppon  execu- 
tjon  such  goods,  howses,  or  lands  as  shallbe  to  his  sattisfaction,  any  lawe, 
custome,  or  vsage  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  tliis  Coiu't  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  no  inhabitant 
of  this  jurisdiccon,  or  straunger,  shall  from  henceforth  send,  carry,  or  trans- 
l^ort  out  of  this  jurisdiccon,  directly  or  indirectly,  by  sea  or  land,  any  of  the 
niony  that  hath  binn  or  shallbe  cojned  ■w^^'in  this  jurisdiccon,  except  twenty 
shillings  for  necessaiy  expences,  on  the  poenalty  of  confiscation,  not  only  of 


198 


THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


1654. 

22  August. 
Peter  Oliuer 
searcher  for 
money. 


[*175.] 


penalty  for 
exporting  y« 
countrjes 
cojne. 


Prohibition  for 
transporting  of 
eheepe. 


No  sheepe 
vnder  2  yefir 
to  be  kild  by 
butchers,  on 
pocnalty  of  20". 


such  money  so  cojned,  but  also  all  the  visible  estate  of  him  that  shall  any  way 
be  found  sending  or  exporting  any  of  the  cojne  aforesajd,  one  third  whereof 
shall  be  to  the  vse  of  the  informer,  or  officer,  the  other  two  thirds  to  the  coun- 
trje.  And  that  this  lawe  may  be  duely  observed  and  executed,  Peter  Oliuer 
and  Jn°  Barrell  for  Boston,  Jacob  Greene  for  Charles  Toune,  George  Wil- 
Ijams  and  Samuell  Archer  for  Salem,  Eobert  Lord  for  Ipswich,  Henry  Rice 
for  Sudbury,  Henry  Sherborne  for  Piscataque,  and  Hercules  Haukins  for  *the 
He  of  Shoales,  are  heereby  appointed  and  authorized  as  scrchers,  to  examine 
and  search  all  psons,  vessells,  packs,  truncks,  chests,  boxes,  or  the  like,  that 
shallbe  transj)orting  out  of  this  jurisdiccbn,  and  finding  any  mony,  shall  seaze 
the  same,  and  forthwith  informe  the  next  magistrate  thereof,  who  shall  issue 
out  his  warrant  for  the  present  seazure  of  the  whole  vissible  estate  of  the 
partje  so  transporting  contrarj'  to  this  lawe,  for  the  vse  of  the  coiiionwealth  and 
partje  seazing  or  informing,  as  is  above  exprest.  And  itt  is  heereby  further 
declared,  that  all  such  masters,  marriners,  or  other  persons  that  shallbe 
found  to  be  privy  or  consenting  to  the  exporting  of  any  of  the  cojne  aforesajd 
out  of  this  jurisdiccbn,  he  or  they  shall,  for  euery  such  offence,  forfeite  the 
soiue  of  twenty  pounds  a  peece,  to  be  to  the  vses  aforesajd  ;  and  the  sajd 
serchers  are  to  take  the  oath  for  searchers,  only,  insteede  of  halfe,  a  third  pte  to 
be  inserted,  and  to  certify  the  next  magistrate  insteed  of  the  auditor ;  and  in 
all  other  tounes  the  cunstables  are,  by  theire  oathes,  bound  to  see  to  the  execu- 
tion of  this  order. 

Whereas  this  countrje  is  at  this  tjme  in  great  streights  in  respect  of  cloath- 
ing,  and  the  most  likeljest  way  tending  to  our  supply  in  that  respect  is  the 
rajsing  and  keeping  of  sheepe  w*''in  our  jurisdiccon,  it  is  therefore  ordered  and 
enacted  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritjc  thereof,  that  after  the  publicatjon  lieere- 
ofj  no  person  or  persons  whatsoeuer  shall  transport  any  yeoes  or  ewe  lambes 
out  of  this  jurisdiccon  to  any  forraigne  port  or  place,  vppon  the  pocnalty  of  the 
forfeiture  of  five  pound  for  euery  ewe  or  yeo  lambs  so  transjjorted,  the  one 
fowerth  parte  to  the  informer,  and  the  other  three  parts  to  the  countije  ;  pro- 
vided, this  order  shall  not  hinder  the  selling  of  such  sheepe  to  any  of  the 
other  collonjes  in  confccderatjon  with  vs  ;  they,  vppon  due  notice  given  by 
our  coiuissioners,  making  a  lawe  to  this  purpose,  to  restrajne  transporting  of 
sheepe  out  of  theire  respective  jurisdiccons.  And  itt  is  further  ordered  by  the 
authoritje  aforesajd,  that  no  ramme  or  weather  lambs  shall  henceforth  be  killed 
by  any  butcher  or  other  person,  except  by  the  keepers  or  masters  of  sheepe, 
for  theire  oune  particcular  occasions,  vntill  they  shallbe  two  yeeres  old,  on  pocn- 
alty of  twenty  shillings  a  lambe,  the  one  half  to  the  countrje  and  the  other  halfe 
to  the  informer,  till  this  Court  take  further  order  therein ;  this  order  to  be 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND,  199 

presently  published  by  a  drume  In  the  markett  place  at  Boston,  and  posted  vp      16  5  4. 

in  some  publicke  place,  which  shallbc  sufficjent  publicatjon  in  this  case.  *~    ''    "^ 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  no  person  w'^n  this  iurisdiccon  shall,  directly  or  indi-  ,,  ', 

'  r  J  >  J  Mault  not  to 

rectly,  after  the  first  of  March  next,  import  any  mault  into  this  jurisdiccon  be  imported. 

from  any  part  of  Europe,  or  shall  buy  or  receive  any  brought  in  by  any  for- 
remer  from  the  parts  aforesajd,  vnder  the  pcenaltje  of  twelve  pence  for  euery 
bushell  that  shallbe  so  imported,  bought,  or  received,  the  one  halfe  to  the  in- 
former, the  other  to  the  coiiion  treasury. 

The  Court  also  agreed  on  a  letter  as  an  ans''  to  the  letters  sent  from 
Conecticott  and  New  Hauen,  w'^'"  is  on  reccord  in  the  booke  of  letters. 

*Forasmuch  as  it  highly  tendeth  to  the  advancement  of  the  gospell  that      [*176.] 

the  ministers  thereof  be  comfortably  maintained,  and  it  being  the  duty  of  the  Provission  for 

ministers 
civill  power  to  vse  all  lawful!  meanes  for  the  attayning  of  that  end,  and  that  majutaiaace. 

henceforth  there  may  be  established  a  settled  encouraging  majntenance  of  min- 
isters in  all  tonnes  and  congregations  w^'in  this  jurisdiccon,  this  Court  doth 
order,  that  the  County  Court  in  euery  shire  shall,  vppon  information  given 
them  of  any* defect  of  any  congregation  or  touneshipp  w"'in  the  shire,  order 
and  appointe  w'  majnetenance  shallbe  allowed  to  the  ministers  of  that  place, 
and  shall  issue  out  warrants  to  the  select  men  to  assesse,  and  the  connstable 
of  the  sajd  toune  to  collect,  the  same,  and  to  distrejne  the  sajd  assessm"'  vppon 
such  as  shall  refuse  to  pay.  And  it  is  heereby  declared  to  be  our  intencon, 
that  an  honor'''''  allowance  be  made  to  the  ministrje  respecting  the  abillitje  of 
the  places  ;  and  if  any  toune  shall  finde  themselves  burdened  by  the  assess- 
ment of  the  County  Court,  they  may  complajne  to  this  Court,  w"^*"  shall  at  all 
tjmes  be  ready  to  giue  just  releife  to  all  men. 

Itt  is  ordered,  y*  all  and  euery  of  the  inhabitants  of  this  jurisdictjon  that  Poenalty  for 
haue  any  of  the  books  in  theire  custody  that  haue  lately  binn  brought  out  of  gieton&      ° 
England,  vnder  the  names  of  Jn"  Reeues  &  Lodouick  Muggleton,  who  pre-  I'eeves  book?. 
tend  themselves  to  be  the  two  last  wittnesses  and  prophetts  of  Jesus  Christ,  w*^** 
are  full  of  blasphemjes,  and  shall  not  bring  or  send  in  all  such  bookes  now  in 
theire  custody  to  the  next  magistrate,  shall  forfeite  the  soine  of  tenn  pounds 
for  euery  such  booke  that  shall  be  found  or  knoune  to  be  in  the  hands  of  any 
inhabitant  after  one  months  publication  heereof,  one  halfe  to  the  informer  and 
the  other  to  the  countrjc. 

This  Court  doth  heereby  declare  and  order,  that  it  shallbe  in  the  Ijbertje  Capt.  Ather- 
of  Capt  Humphrey  Atherton  to  transport  or  keepe  his  sheepe  out  of  this  juris-  keepesheepe 
dicCon,  on   Martjns   Vinyard  or  Natuckett,  he  pforming  the  lawe  now  made  *''• 
about  sheepe  in  other  respects,  on  the  pccnalty  therein  exprest. 

Whereas  the  Lord  our  gratjous  God  hath  lately  bestowed  seuerall  pub- 


22  August. 
Day  of  thankS' 


200  THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

16  5  4.      licke  mercjes  vppon  our  deare  native  countije,  in  ans''  to  his  peoples  prayers, 
and  therein  ourselves  haue  had  a  deepe  share,  the  sence  whereof  wee  doubt 
not  lyes  vppon  the  harts  of  all  that  love  and  feare  God,  ingaging  them  to  a 
giving.  thankful!  &  publicke  acknouledgment  thereof,  to  the  glory  of  his  name,  who 

is  the  fountajne  of  all  good  ;  the  particulars  whereof  are  :  — 

1.  The  happy  vnion  &  peace  made  betweene  England  and  the  Vnited. 
Pvinces  after  so  sharpe  a  warre,  therein  binding  vpone  peace  also. 

2.  The  hopefull  establishment  of  gouernment  in  our  native  countrje  in 
that  way,  and  in  those  of  whom  wee  haue  great  cawse  to  expect,  through  the 

[*177.]  strength  of  our  God,  that  the  Lords  kingdome  and  people  willbe  *cherrished, 
the  peoples  libertjes  preserved,  and  the  peace  of  the  nation  setled. 

Thirdly,  the  Lords  crouning  this  yeare  w"^  his  goodnes,  in  the  blessings 
of  the  earth,  although  the  spring  was  more  dry  then  ordinary,  and  some 
threats  of  great  rajnes  this  harvest. 

4thiy_  Xhat  the  Lord,  in  answer  to  our  prayers,  hath  prevented  a  threat- 
ning  warre,  and  lengthned  out  our  peace.  Itt  is  therefore  thought  expedient  by 
this  Coiut  to  sett  apart  the  28"^  of  the  seventh  month  next  as  »  day  of  pub- 
licke praise  and  thankfuU  acknowledgment  for  theise  mercjes,  coiiiending  it  to 
all  the  churches  and  faithfull  in  the  laud,  to  celebrate  the  high  prajses  of  our 
God,  and  desiring  the  Lord  gratiously  to  affect  all  our  harts  w'''  and  in  Christ 
Jesus  to  accept  of  this  service. 

This  Court  was  dissolved  25*  of  August,  1654. 


19  of  October,      M  a  Geiinerall  Court,  held  at  Boston,  the  18'^  of  October,  1654. 

1654. 

Present,  Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,  Gofln'',  Capt  Robt  Bridges, 

Jn°  Eudecot,  Es^,  Dcp'  GoQ,  Cap?  Tho  Wiggins, 

M'  Increase  Nowell,  Maj''  Symon  "Willard, 

M''  Symon  Bradstreet,  Capt  Humphry  Atherto, 

M'  Sain  Symons,  &  the  deputjes  retou'"n. 

WHEREAS  experjenc  gives  vs  cause  to  complayne  of  much  disorder  in 
tjme  of  publicke  ordinances,  in  the  meeting  howses,  in  seuerall  con- 
gregations in  this  jurisdiccon,  through  the  vnreuerent  cai-riage  and  behaviour 
Order  to  p'vent  of  diuers  young  psons,  and  others,  notwithstanding  the  best  meanes  that  haue 

5?phanation  of  ii-cir  ^  i}     •        ' 

y  .s;ibnath  in    biuu  hitherto  vsed  in  the  sajd  assembljes  for  the  reformacon  thereof,  itt  is 
howse.*""^       therefore  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  it  shallbe  in 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  201 

the  liberty  of  the  officers  of  the  congregation,  and  the  select  men  of  such  1  G  5  4. 
tounes  together,  to  nominate  some  one  or  two  meete  psons  to  reforme  all  such  """  '^  ' 
disordered  persons  as  shall  offend  by  any  misdemenor,  either  in  the  congre- 
gation or  elswhere,  neere  about  the  meeting  house,  either  by  serious  reproofe, 
more  private  or  more  publicke,  or  other  the  like  warning,  and  meete  correction 
of  the  magistrate  or  coiiiissioners  of  that  toune  judge  meete ;  and  wee  are  not 
doubtful!  but  the  reuerend  elders  of  the  seuerall  congregations,  according  to 
theire  wisdome,  will  so  order  the  tjme  of  thcire  jiublicke  exercise,  that  none 
shall  be  ordinarily  occasioned  to  breake  of  from  the  congregation  before  the 
full  conclusion  of  publicke  exercise. 

Whereas  uppon  to  much  exprejence,  itt  is  apparent,  and  also  it  is  much  To  prevent 
complayned  of  as  a  cawse  of  much  and  just  greivance,  that  the  Indians,  through  yejujiaug 
the  excessive  and  abusive  drinking  of  wine  and  strong  licquors,  are  frequently 
ouercome,  and  thereby  guilty  of  s-svj'nish  drunckennes,  w'^''  ofttimes  they  at- 
tayne  by  some  such  of  the  traders  as  to  much  affect  and  regard  theire  ouue 
proffitt,  this  Court,  taking  knowledge  thereof,  and  judging  it  to  be  theire  duty 
not  only  to  beare  wittnes  against  such  a  sinfuU  practise  amongst  the  uatiues, 
but  also  to  vse  such  meanes  as  the  Lord  putts  into  theire  hands  to  restrayne 
the  same,  doe  therefore  order,  and  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Court  be  it 
enacted,  that  no  mailer  of  person  whatsoeuer  of  this  jui-isdiccon,  except  such, 
as  are  in  this  order  expresly  named,  shall  sell,  contract,  or  trucke,  directly  or 
indii-ectly,  by  themselves  or  others  in  theire  behalfe,  either  wine  or  strong 
hcquors  of  any  sorte,  kinde,  or  name,  at  any  time,  or  vppon  any  pretence  what- 
soeuer,  to  any  Indian  or  Indians,  vppon  forfeiture  of  the  soiiie  of  twenty  shil- 
lings p  pint  to  the  coiiiou  treasury,  and  according  to  that  proportion  for  all 
quantitjes  more  or  lesse.    And  itt  is  further  ordered,  by  the  authoritje  aforesajd,  Psons  licenst 

.  to  sell  wine  & 

that  in  the  county  of  Suffolke,  M"'  John  "Wisewall,  of  Dorchester,  Capt  Eliazer  strong  Uquors 
Lusher,  of  Dedham  ;  in  the  county  of  Midlesex,  Thomas  Brooke,  sen,  of  Con-    °  ''*  °  J^°'' 
cord,  and  W"  Condrey,  of  Reading  ;  in  Essex,  W™  Moody,  of  Newbery,  and 
John  Fry,  of  Andevor ;  in  Norfolk,  Roger  Shawe,  *of  Hampton,  and  Henry      [*  178.1 
Palmer,  of  Hauerhill;  in  Yorkshire,  W'^  Pomfrett,  of  Douer,  and  Edmond 
Littlefeild,  of  Wells,  are  heereby  impowered  and  ordered  to  sell  wine  of  any 
sort  and  strong  licquors  to  the  Indians  as  to  theire  judgments  shall  seeme 
meete  and  necessary  for  theire  reliefe,  in  just  and  vrgent  occasions,  and  not 
otheruise  ;    provided,  that  the  sajd  psons  so   impowered,  nor  any  theire  as-  None  to  sell 

1    11       n  -I   T  T     T  1  •  •  aboue  1  pint 

signes,  snail  sell  or  deiiuer  to  any  one  Indian  more  then  one  pmte  at  one  tjme,  ^g  ^^y  one 
vppon  any  pretence  whatsoeucr,  which  persons  so  named  and  empowred  as    "  ^^°' 
abouesajd  are  advised,  and  heereby  required,  so  to  mannage  this  case,  wherein 
they  ai-e  entrusted,  w""  that  care,  heedfullnes,  and  dilligence,  that  to  the  vttmost 

VOL.  IV.  PART   I.  26 


18  October. 


202  THE  KECORDS  OE  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  G54.      of  tlieire  power  this  sinful!  and  offenciue  abuse  maybe  reformed.     Also,  itt  is 
ordered,  that  no  person  shallbe  heereafter  empowred  and  intrusted  heerein, 
except  such  only  as  shall  particularly  be  allowed  of  by  the  Gennerall  Court. 
Judgm"  or  ex-  Whereas  there  is  a  great  abuse  in  selling  of  judgments  and  executjons, 

r^B  Id  "  '^^^  ^'^  altering  the  propriety  of  them  before  they  be  sattisfied,  or  goods  seazed, 
whereby  great  inconveniencyes  may  arise,  as  experience  hath  prooved,  this 
Court  doth  therefore  order,  that  after  the  end  of  this  session,  no  person  shall 
sell,  alienate,  or  assigne  any  judgement  or  execution  whatsoeuer ;  and  if  any 
shall  presume  to  act  contrary  to  this  order,  his  sale,  assignement,  or  alienation 
shall  be  vojd  in  lawe,  and  in  case  the  partje  dye  after  the  judgment,  before  he 
hath  taken  out  an  execution,  or  before  sattisfaction  be  received,  his  executor 
or  administrator  shall  take  out  or  renew  the  execution,  as  the  testator  himself 
might  haue  donne. 
Comissioners  Forasmuch  as  the  three  coinissioners  for  smale   causes   in  the   seuerall 

o  e  m  en-  jg^j^gg  -^ythjjj  (.j^jg  jurisdiction  liaue  great  power  of  judicature,  as  by  seuerall 
former  orders  appeares,  the  excercise  whereof  being  of  great  concernment  both 
to  tonnes  and  countrje,  this  Court  doth  therefore  order,  and  be  it  heereby  en- 
acted, that  henceforth  there  shallbe  none  admitted  to  be  a  comissioner  for 
any  toune  w"'iu  this  jurisdictjon,  but  such  whose  conversaoon  are  inoffencive, 
and  whose  fidellitje  to  the  countrje  is  sufficijently  knoune  and  approoved  of  by 
the  Countje  Courte  of  that  sheire. 
Coffiittee  to  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  Capt  Savage,  Capt  Lusher,  and  M'  John  Wisewall 

take  y«  freas-   gi^^i^jg  ^  coinittee  to  examine  the  Treasurers    accounts  iiiiediately  after  the 

urers  acco'.  •' 

breaking  vp  of  this  Court,  that  so  the  accoumpt  maybe  published  for  the  coun- 

trjes  sattisfaction. 

The  coionjes  The  Court,  having  pervsed  and  seriously  considered  the  agreement  of  their 

reraion.  coinissioners  at  theire  last  meeting  at  Hartford,  as  to  the  ending  of  all  former 

differences  and  offences  betwixt  this  government  and  the  rest  of  theire  confocd- 

erates,  doe  ajiproove  thereof,  and  consent  thereto,  proffessing  theire  resolution  to 

act  accordingly,  and  therefore  doe  order,  that  letters  be  sent  to  the  other  three 

Gennerall  Courts,  to  certefy  the  same. 

r*  179.1  *  Whereas  this  Courte,  in  May  last,  ordered  and  appointed  each  souldjer  of 

4'  e^  to  be         seuerall  of  the  tonnes  within  this  jurisdiccon  to  pay  fower  shillings  sixe  pence  in 

levjed  of  each     ,.,_  .-.  .,  •  /•     i       rt       ^  •       i  ^ 

souldjer  for  re-  l^i*^  °f  lower  trayning  dajes,  towards  the  rejjaire  of  the  Castle,  as  m  that  order 
paire  of  y«  more  ffully  appeares,  the  Court,  finding  that  worke  to  be  much  vnder  delayes,  for 
want  of  some  meete  person  to  be  appointed  for  the  gathering  thereof,  or,  vppon 
refusall  of  payment,  to  leuy  the  same  by  distresse,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  the 
authoritje  of  this  Court,  that  the  coiuistables  of  euery  such  toune  where  theire 
souldiers  are  to  pay  shall   and    heereby  are  impowred    and    required  forth- 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  203 

with  to  demaiind  and  receive  of  euery  souldjer  in  such  company  the  sajd  some      16  5  4. 
of  fower  shillino-s  sixe  pence,  and,  on  refusall  or  neglect,  to  levy  the  same  by    '~^~^^~~~' 

°  *■  ,  .         18  October. 

distrcsse,  as  in  other  cases ;  and  they  are  heereby  required  speedily  to  send  in 
what  they  shall  receive  vnto  Boston,  and  dcliuer  it  to  Majo'  Gennerall  Edward 
Gibon  and  Capt  Humphrey  Atherton,  or  theire  assignes,  who  are  appointed 
a  comittee  to  order  the  sajd  repaire  of  the  Castle  therewith,  the  charges  and 
adventure  of  such  pay  as  shall  be  so  sent  to  Boston  to  be  allowed  out  of  euery 
such  payment. 

Forasmuch  as,  notwithstanding  the  great  care  this  Courte  hath  had,  and  Lawe  ag« 

drunckenes  in 

the  lawes  made  to  suppresse  that  swinish  sinne  of  drunkennes,  and  yett  persons  prWate  howsea, 

addicted  to  that  vice  finde  out  wajes  to  deceave  the  lawes  provided  in  that 

case,  for  the  better  preventing  thereof  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Courte  and  the  au- 

thoritje  thereof,  that  none  licensed  to  sell  strong  waters,  nor  any  private  howse- 

keeper,  shall  permitt  any  person  or  persons  to  sitt  drincking  or  tipling  strong 

waters,  wine,  or  strong  beere,  in  theire  bowses  ;  and  if  any  such  seller  of 

strong  waters,    or    private   house    keeper,  shall   be   legally  convicted  before 

any   Countje    Courte,    any    one    magistrate,    or    Coiuissioners    Coiu'te,    such 

person  shall,  for  the  first  oflcnce,  be  fined  twenty  shiUings  ;  and  if  the  partje 

so  convicted  be  not  able  to  pay  his  fine,  he  shall  be  set  on  the  stockes,  where 

he  shall  continew  one  whole  bower  ;  and  if  any  such  seller  of  strong  waters 

shallbe  convicted  as  aforesajd  of  a  second  oiFence  of  the  same  nature,  he  shall 

forfelte  his  licence,  and  shall  also  pay  twenty  shillings  as  a  fine  to  the  coinon- 

wealth ;  and  if  any  private  howsekeeper  shallbe  convicted  as  aforesajd  of  a 

second  offence  against  this  lawe,  he  shall  pay  a  fine  of  five  pounds ;  and  for  the 

third  offence,  such  person  or  persons,  being  so  convicted,  shall  be  bound  to 

theii-e  good  behaviour  in  twenty  pounds  bond,  w"^  two  sufficijent  suretjes,  or 

be  coinitted  to  prison. 

This   Court,  finding   great  inconvenience   in  the  vncertaintje   of  theire  Connstables  to 

retourne  who 

members  and  the  noumber  thereof,  doe  therefore  order,  that  from  henceforth  ^re  chosen 

the  counstables  of  each  toune  shall  retourne  the  name  of  the  person  or  persons  ^'^J/^^''  *  ''" 

chosen  by  the  freemen  to  be  deputjes  for  the  Gennerall  Courte,  and  the  tjme 

for  which  they  are  chosen,  whither  for  the  first  session  or  the  whole  yeare  ; 

and  euery  counstable  that  shall  faile  in  this  his  duty  shall  forfeite  the  some 

of  twenty  shiUings,  to  be  pajd  to  the  comon  treasury  ;  and  all  psons  so  chosen 

as  aforesajd,  accepting  thereof,  which  shall  be  absent  from  the  howse  during 

the  tjme  of  theire  sitting,  without  just  grounds,  so  judged  by  the  house,  shall 

pay  twenty  shillings  a  day  for  eueiy  such  default,  and  the  seuerall  retournes 

of  each  connstable  shall  be  kept  on  file  by  the  clarke  of  the  Deputjes,  vntill 

the  Court  be  ended. 


204 


THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1G54. 

18  October. 

[*180.] 

Some  rccom- 
pence  to  y« 
magistrates. 


Additional 
oiiseers  of 
Harvard  Col- 
ledg. 


Comittee  about 
y  Castle. 


Muggletons 
book  to  be 
burnt. 


Qusestion  ab' 
defraying 

souldjers 
charges  not 
implojd. 


*Itt  is  oideicd  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  henceforth  there 
shallbe  allowed  to  each  of  the  homiored  magistrates  "which  are  akeady,  or  which 
heereafter  shallbe,  chosen  and  attend  the  service  of  the  country,  thirty  five 
pounds  p  an  x  um,  they  bearing  theire  oune  charges  in  such  Courts  as  in  the 
order  made  in  the  yeare  1653  is  in  that  case  provided,  and  likewise  beare 
Eequall  proporcon  of  publicke  charges  with  other  men  in  all  toune  and  coun- 
trje  rates.  And  further,  it  is  ordered,  that,  in  regard  the  easterue  parts,  which 
beare  no  charge  w""  vs,  haiie  some  bennefit  by  the  helpe  of  some  of  the  hon- 
nored  magistrates,  that  they  shallbe  Ijable  to  pay  in  yearely  to  the  countrje 
Treasurer  the  soiiie  of  seventeene  pounds  and  tenn  shillings  towards  the  chai'ges. 

Whereas  diners  elders  who  were  ouerseers  of  the  colledg  are  taken  from 
vs,  some  by  death,  and  others  gonne  for  England,  so  that  there  is  at  this  tjme 
great  need  of  the  helpe  of  some  other  elders  to  supply  theire  places,  the  Courte 
doth  order,  that  M"'  John  Allin,  pastor  of  Dedham,  M'  John  Norton,  who  now 
is  teacher  at  Boston,  M"'  Samuell  Whiting,  and  M"^  Thomas  Cobbett,  pastor  and 
teacher  at  Lynn,  shallbe  ouerseers  of  the  eolledge,  to  jojoie  with  the  rest  of 
the  ouerseers  for  the  ordering  and  disposing  of  such  things  as  are  req^uisite 
for  the  good  and  welfare  thereof,  — 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  Majo""  Gen- 
nerall  Edward  Gibons,  Cap^  Humphry  Atherton,  Capt  Thomas  Sauage,  and 
Capt  Thomas  Clarke  shall  hereby  be  deputed  and  empoured  to  be  a  coiiiittee 
furnished  with  ffuU  power  to  treate  and  conclude  w**"  Captajne  Eichard  Daven- 
port, or  in  case  he  concurr  not,  w*''  any  other  man  whom  they,  or  any  three 
of  them,  shall  judge  meete  for  that  place,  and  trust  to  be  captajne  at  our 
Castle,  and  to  attend  the  service  therein  required  by  lawe ;  and  the  sajd  cap- 
tajne shall  hier  fower  fitt  men  to  be  the  garrison  there,  and  to  pay  the  sajd 
souldjers,  provided  the  whole  soine  for  sallery  for  the  captaine  and  garrison 
exceede  not  one  hundred  and  fifty  pounds,  and  to  make  theire  retourne  to  the 
next  Court  of  Election. 

The  Court,  being  sencible  of  the  great  dishonnor  y'  dayly  redounds  to 
the  great  and  sacred  name  and  truths  of  God,  by  the  many  notorious  hferet- 
ticall  and  blasphemous  bookes  w'^''  to  frequently  flye  vp  and  doune  in  other 
parts  of  the  world,  and  lately  haue  crept  in  amongst  vs  vnder  the  name  of 
Lodouicke  Mugleton  and  John  Reeves,  doe  therefore  order,  that  as  many 
of  those  books  as  are  or  shallbe  in  custody  shall  on  the  next  lecture  day 
be  burnt  after  the  lecture,  in  the  markett  place,  by  the  executioner,  at  Boston. 

Itt  being  put  to  the  quaestion,  whither  the  countrjes  should  be  liable  to 
defray  the  charge  of  such  souldjers  as  were  vnder  the  late  presse,  &  not  jm- 
plojed  on  service,  it  was  resolved  on  the  negative. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  205 

*Tlie  Court,  being  senclble  of  the  great  charge  of  the  countrje,  and  there-      1  G  5  4. 
fore  not  wilhng  to  prcsse  vp^ion  them,  vnlesse  in  case  of  necessitjc,  to  defray    ^~    '^       ' 
such   debts   as  they  know  not  how  to  avojd,  doe  therefore  order,  that  tlie      r*iQ-, 
Treasurer  shall  send  forth  his  warrants  to  all  tounes  for  a  quarter  ptc  of  the  ,    „,  „  „  „ 
annuall  le\T,  as  an  additjon  to  this  yeares  levy,  for  defraying  the  expense  of  '""'"' ''''''' '° 

be  added. 

the  late  expedition. 

Whereas  wee  cannot  but  acknowledg  the  great  goodnes  of  God  towards  140"  to  y 
his  people  in  this  wildernes  in  raysing  vp  schooles  of  learning,  and  especially  feUows^f  Har 
the  colledge,  from  whenc  there  hath  sprung  many  vsefull  instruments,  both  '^'^'^  CoUedg. 
in  church  and  coiTion-wealth,  both  to  this  and  other  places,  and  whereas  at 
present  the  worke  of  the  colledge  hauc  binn  seuerall  wajes  obstructed,  and 
scemes  yett  also  at  present,  for  want  of  comfortable  mainetenance  for  the  en- 
couragement of  a  president,  this  Court  taking  the  same  into  theire  serjous 
consideracon,  and  finding  that  though  many  propposicons  haue  binn  made  for 
a  voluntary  contribution,  yett  nothing  haue  binn  hitherto  obteined  from  seuer- 
all psons  and  tounes,  although  some  haue  donne  very  liberally  and  freely,  and 
fearing  lest  wee  should  shew  ourselves  vngratefuU  to  God,  or  vnfaithfidl  to 
posteritje,  if  so  good  a  seminary  of  knowledg  and  virtue  should  fall  to  the 
ground  through  any  neglect  of  ours,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court  and 
the  authoritje  thereof,  that,  besides  the  proffit  of  the  ferry  formerly  graunted 
to  the  colledg,  w'^''  shall  be  contjnewed,  that  there  shall  be  yearly  levjed,  by  ad- 
ditjon to  the  countrje  rate,  on  hundred  pounds,  to  be  pajd  by  the  Treasurer 
of  the  countrje  to  the  colledg  treasurer,  for  the  behoofe  and  majntenance  of 
the  president  and  fellowes,  to  be  distributed  betweene  the  president  and  fel- 
lowes  according  to  the  determination  of  the  ouerseers  of  the  colledg,  and 
this  to  coutinew  during  the  pleasure  of  the  countrje  ;  and  itt  is  heereby  or- 
dered, that  no  man  shall  stand  ingaged  to  pay  his  voluntary  contributjon 
that  he  hath  vnderwritt  by  virtue  of  this  Com-ts  propposicon,  and  that  such 
persons  as  haue  already  donn  voluntarily  shall  be  considered  for  the  same  in 
the  countrje  rate  such  a  proportion  as  this  addition  of  one  hundred  jjounds 
doe  add  to  the  rate,  to  be  allowed  by  the  counstable  to  each  person,  and  by 
the  Treasurer  to  the  counstable. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this    Court,  that   all  sorts  of  come  shall  be  pajd    in  Prize  of  come 


the  countrje  rate    for  this    yeare   ensuing,   at    these    prises    following,  viz. 
wheat  and  barly  at  five  shillings  p  bushell,  rye  and  pease  at  fewer  shillings 
p  bushell,  and  Indian  at  three  shillings  p  bushell ;  and  all  other  things  pajd 
into  the   countrje  shall  henceforth  be  apprised,  according  to  law,  as  ready 
mony. 

Vppon  the   examinatjon  of  the  accounts  of  the    capt  of  the  Castle  for 


w"  countrje 
rate. 


206  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1654.      all  recconings  for  sallerje  and  othcruise  vnto  the  29"'  of  the  T""  m"  last,  1654,  the 

'       ^    ~^    Court  finds  to  remajne  due  to  the  sajd  capt  the  soiiie  of  one  hundred  ninety 

.,.  ,  '     three  pounds  fower  shillings,  w'^  soine  shall  be  by  bill  presented  to  the  audi- 

Capt.  Daven-    tor  gennerall,  and  by  him  signed,  and  the  Treasurer  shall  make  speedy  pay- 
port. 

ment  thereof  out  of  the  countrje  rate ;  and  whereas  it  appeares  that  there  is  lost 

a  boate,  and  a  drume  spoiled,  yet  it  appearing  to  the   Court  that  it  was   not 

thro  his  neglect,   &  that    he    hath    binn    at    further    charge    then    he    giue 

account,   the   Court   dischargeth  him    of   y'  losse,  &  orders  y''   countrje   to 

beare  it. 

[*182.]  *  Whereas  the  clarlce  of  the  Howse  of  Dej)utjes  is  for  future  tjme  to  beare 

Clark  of  y°        (-j^^  charge  of  his  ounc  expences  for  djett  and  lodging,  which,  by  reason  of 

Dopu's  sallary  j  . 

IG"  p  ann.  his  rcmotencs  of  dwelling,  must  needs  be  much,  this  Court  doth  therefore 
order,  tliat  from  henceforth  there  shallbc  allowed  to  that  officer,  for  his  sal- 
lery,  djett,  and  lodging,  tlie  soilie  of  sixteene  pounds  p  annii,  to  be  pajd  him 
yearelyby  the  Treasurer,  he  giving  in  just  accompt  to  the  auditor  gennerall  of 
all  his  receipts  for  peticons,  w"^*"  he  is  to  take  in  part  of  his  aforesajd  allow- 
ance, and  this  to  be  in  full  for  whatcuer  hath  binn  heertofore  promised  him  by 
this  Court,  not  only  for  entring  the  seuerall  orders  and  acts  of  this  Courte, 
but  also  for  transcribing  in  a  bookc  all  forrajgne  transactioias  w"'  the  English 
or  other  nations,  as  also  to  perfect  the  psent  bookc  he  hath  in  his  hands,  w*''all 
the  orders  of  the  former  yeares,  since  that  booke  beganru 

Deputies  to  be  Forasmuch  as,  according  to  the  present  forme  of  gouernment  of  this  juris- 

dicoon,  the  safety  of  the  coiiionwealth,  the  right  administracon  of  justice,  the 
preservatjon  of  the  peace,  and  puritje  of  the  churches  of  Christ  therein,  vnder 
God,  doth  miich  depend  vppon  the  piety,  wisdome,  and  soundnes  of  the  Gen- 
nerall Court,  not  only  [Magistrates,  but  Deputjes,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by 
this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  no  man,  although  a  freeman,  shallbe 
accepted  as  a  deputy  in  the  Gennerall  Court  that  is  vnsotmd  in  judgment  con- 
cerning the  majne  points  of  Cliristian  religion  as  they  haue  binn  held  forth 
and  acknowledged  by  the  genneralitje  of  the  Prottestants  Orthodoxe  writers, 
or  that  is  scandolous  in  his  conuersation,  or  that  is  vnfaithfull  to  this  govern- 
ment ;  and  it  is  further  ordered,  that  it  shall  not  be  lawfull  for  any  freeman 
to  make  chojce  of  any  such  person  as  aforesajd  that  is  knoiuie  to  himselfe  to 
be  vnder  such  offence  or  offences  before  specified,  vppon  pajne  or  pocnaltje  of 
five  pounds,  and  that  the  cases  of  such  persons  to  be  trjed  by  the  whole  Gen- 
nerall Court. 

Souidicrs  1''*'  ^^  hcereby  ordered,  that  the  coinittees  of  the  militja  in  the  seuerall 

vnd'  presse  to    ^ounes  shall  forthwith  discharge  all  such  souldiers  that  are  vnder  presse. 

be  discnarged.  o  j 

Majo"^  Willard,  coiiiander  in  cheife  for  the  Vnited  Colonjes  in  the  late 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  207 

expeditjou  against  Ninnigret,  being  retourned,   and  having  discharged  the      1654. 
forces  comitted  to  him  from  the  colonjes,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  W"  Davis    ""       *       ^ 
be  required  to  disband  liis  troope  of  horse  rajsed  by  tliis  colony,  and  also  the  „    .  „    .  ' 
niajo''  genuerall  to  discharge  the  military  watches :  warrents  issued  out  to  y"  disband  his 

troope,  &  maj" 

j)sons  abovemencbned  accordingly.  genu"  y« 

The  Coiu-t  judgeth   it  meete,  on  the  request  of   Cap?  Robt  Hardinge,  "^t'^hes 

Richard  Marjerom,  Henry  Cowes,  Frauncis  Bruers,  Jn"  Bartrum,  Long,  &  Capt.  Harding 

Roger  Bounty  shall  be  releast  of  theire  bonds  to  this  Court  for  theLre  contin-  of  their  bonis. 

uance  in  the  countrje,  &  sequestration  of  theire  estates. 

*M'^  Jonas  Clarke  and   iP   SamueU  Andrewes,  both  well  skild  in  the      [*183.] 

mathematticks,   having    had  the   coiuand   of  shipps   vppon   seuerall   vojages.  North  ijne  of 

o'  pattent  lajd 

being  appointed  to  take  an  observation  at  the  northerly  bounds  of  our  patent  out. 
vppou  the  sea  cost,  made  this  retourne,  as  foUoweth :  Due  observation  taken 
the  IS""  day  of  October,  1653.  The  place  of  our  last  observation,  the  altitude 
of  the  svnne  Avas,  according  to  observation  and  our  best  judgment,  thirty  fower 
degrees  thirty  fower  minutes ;  the  declination  of  the  svnne,  according  to  cal- 
culation in  England,  eleven  degrees  thii'ty  nine  minutes ;  the  difference  of 
longitude  betwixt  this  place  and  England,  according  to  oiu-  best  judgment,  is 
sixty  three  degrees,  which  in  tjme  makes  fower  bowers  and  one  fifth  pai-te  of 
an  bower,  which  adds  to  our  declination  thi-ee  minutes  and  40  seconds,  all 
which  altitude,  declination,  and  meridianall  difference,  being  added  together, 
doth  make  forty  six  degrees  sixteene  minutes  forty  seconds,  w'^'',  being 
substracted  from  ninety  degrees,  gaue  vs  to  be  then  in  north  lattitude  forty 
three  degrees  forty  three  minutes  twenty  seconds,  w*  was  eight  seconds  to 
the  northward  of  our  lattitude  given,  which  wee  measured  backe  againe  vppon 
a  south  Ijne,  and  there  fell  in  a  very  plajne  place,  where  were  few  trees ;  but 
wee  marked  fouer  or  five  trees,  one  of  them  markt  w""  M:  B: ;  and  at  the  sea- 
side, where  the  Ijne  doth  extend,  there  Ijeth  a  greyish  rocke  at  a  high  water 
marke,  cleft  in  the  midle ;  els  the  shore,  being  sand  w'l'out  stones,  the  Ijne 
doth  runne  ouer  the  northermost  pointe  of  an  iland,  as  wee  guesse  not  aboue 
two  or  three  rodd  aboue  high  water  marke ;  the  iland  is  called  the  Vpper 
Clapboard  Iland,  about  a  quarter  of  a  mile  from  the  majne  in  Casco  Bay, 
about  fower  or  five  miles  to  the  northward  of  M'  Macworths  house.  Given 
vnder  our  hands  the  SS"*  of  October,  1653. 

JONAS   CLARKE, 
SAMUELL   ANDREWES. 

M'  Clarke  being  absent,  M'  Samuell  Andrewes,  vppon  oath,  testified  to         1653. 
the  truth  thereof,  as  foUoweth:   Yow  sweare,  by  the  living  God,  that  the 


208  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  54.     retourne  yow  made  vnder  yo"^  hand  of  the  observation  yow  made  on  the  thir- 
"        '        '    teenth  of  October,  on  the  northerly  bounds  of  our  pattent,  is  true,  according 
to  the  rules  of  arte  and  yo"'  best  skill  and  judgment.    Taken  before  the  Magis'^ 
in  Gennerall  Court,  19"^  of  October,  1654. 

EDW:    KAWSON,  Secrecy. 

soil  to  Goodwife  The  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  allow  vnto  Gooduife  Hajden,  for  the  re- 

Hajdensc      .  j^^.^^  ^^  ^^^  distempred  child,  to  be  pajd  out  of  the  countrje  rate  for  the  en- 
suing yeare,  the  soiiie  of  fiffty  shillings. 
Ans'  to  M'  In  the  case  of  M'  Edward  Godfrys  coraplajnt  against  the  toune  of  Yorke, 

pet'icon^  about  lands,  itt  is  ordered,  w'**  consent  of  the  sajd  M""  Godfry  and  ]\I''  Ed- 

1^  ward  Rushworth,  on  behalfe  of  the  toune  of  Yorke,  that  M''  W™  Worcester, 

M"^  John  Brocke,  and  M''  Vallentjne  Hill  shall  and  heereby  are  appointed 
coinissioners  from  this  Court,  to  heare  and  determine  all  the  differences  be- 
tweene  the  sajd  M"  Godfry  and  the  toune  of  Yorke,  in  reference  to  a  meete 
proportion  of  lands  to  be  allowed  the  sajd  M'  Godfry,  according  to  his  demerritts, 
as  also  for  his  charge  in  attendance  on  this  Court ;  and  the  sajd  comissioners 
are  heereby  desii-ed  to  make  a  full  end  of  this  buisenes  by  the  last  of  Aprill, 
1655.  The  meaning  of  the  Court  is,  that  each  particular  person  concerned  is 
included,  aswell  as  the  toune  joynctly,  in  the  buisnes  above  menconed.  For 
the  better  accomplishment  thereof,  the  Court  ordered  a  letter  to  be  sent  to  y 
coinissioners,  w*  was  donne  accordingly. 
[*184.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  keeper  of  the  prison  for  the  tjme  being   shall 

Kepers  henceforth  haue  the  same  libertie  that  the  marshall  hath,  in  all  civill  cases, 

libertje  to  take 

bayie.  to  take    sufficijent   bayle    after    coinittment,    as    the   marshall   might   before 

coinittment. 
Da'  1 :  9  mo,  In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  John  Cheny,  the  Court,  having  heard  what  y° 

^^^^'  sajd  Jn°  Cheny  could  say  for  the  inhseritance  y'  Anthony  Sadler  bought  of  Chris- 

Courts  aproba-  topher  Batt,  in  referenc  to  Abjell  Sadler,  sonne  to  the  sajd  Anthony,  and  what 
I^rceL^v™'^   Isacke  Bozwell  could  say  for  his  purchasing  the  same  land  of  the  sajd  Chris- 
izake  BozweU.  topher  Batt,  the  Court  judged  it  meete  to  allow  of  the  agreement  made  betweene 
the  sajd  partjes  and  signed  by  the  sajd  Jn°  Cheny,  as  herevnder  is  written,  and 
doe  confirme  the  estate  of  the  sajd  house  and  land  to  the  sajd  Izacke  Bozwell. 
Whereas    there   hath  binn  a  suite  in  lawe   depending  betweene   John 
Cheny,    of  Newbury,    guardjan   to    Abjell    Sadler    and  Izake    Bozwell,    of 
Salisbury,  about  the  title  of  an  inheritance  w*  sometimes  was  M""  Christopher 
Batts,  lying  and  being  in  the  toune  of  Salisbury,  the  sajd  John  Cheny,  by 
theise  f>°%  doth  acquitt  and  discharge  the  sajd  Isake  Boswell  from   all  suites 
and  demands,  for  the  tjme   past,  and  for  the  tjme  to  come  doth  engage  and 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  209 

promise  neuer  to  sue  or  any  more  molest  the  sajd  Izake  Boswell  about  his      16  54. 
buisnes. 

JOHN   CHENY. 


1  November 


Acknowledged  in  Court,  and  subscribed  by  John  Cheny  the  first  of  y« 
9  m",  1654. 

INCREASE   NOWELL. 

Septemb.  23,  1654. 
In  obedience  to  the  Gennerall  Courts  order,  wee  haue  vejwd  the  Ijne 
concluded  by  Salisbury  and  Hauerill,  to  devide  the  land  betweene  them,  and 
wee  finde  that,  as  it  is  expressed  in  the  peticon,  there  was  a  great  mistake  in  the 
first  running  of  the  Ijne  :  this  wee  finde  acknowledged  by  both  partjes  ;  for  he 
that  carrjed  the  compasse  at  the  first  from  the  place  concluded,  and  from  Merre- 
macke  Riuer  but  one  mile  and  a  quarter  to  a  stumpe  of  a  pipe  staff"  tree,  he  sajd 
he  had  runne  north  west,  which  mooved  the  men  chosen  by  Hauerill  to  yeild 
vnto  Salisbury  one  pointe  more ;  but  wee  haue  gonne  northwest  from  the  place  on 
Merremacke  Riuer  formerly  concluded  on,  and  wee  find  that  northwest  cometh 
aboue  a  quarter  of  a  mile  in  going  a  mile  and  a  quarter  *ieerer  to  Hauerill  Haverili  & 
then  the  Ijne  first  runne ;  so  wee  finde  northwest  is  as  much  as,  according  to  laj^outf  ^* 
the  true  vnderstanding  of  theire  first  agreement,  doth  yeild  vnto  Salisbury.  If 
the  Ijne  norwest  and  by  west  should  stand,  a  great  part  of  the  meadowes  lying 
on  that  quarter  would  be  cut  of  from  Hauerill,  to  theire  great  prejudice ;  and 
the  not  knowing  of  that  mistake  majde  them  yeild  one  pointe  more  :  wee  thinke, 
if  the  pleasure  of  the  Court  be  so,  that  it  may  be  well  for  this  honnored  Court 
to  order  that  a  northwest  Ijne  may  part  the  land  betwixt  them,  only  if  any 
of  the  meadowes  lajd  oute  to  any  of  Hauerill  shall  be  cutt  of  from  Hauerill  by 
this  Ijne,  that  those  meadowes  shall  remajne  to  Hauerill,  or  those  men  to  whom 
it  is  lajd,  foreuer.  Fiuther,  wee  thinke  meete  that  Salisbury  shall  haue  liber- 
ty over  Hauerill  Coinons  if  the  swamp  stop  the  way,  the  sajd  way  to  be 
forty  rod  broad.     Yo"  in  all  dutifull  obedjenc. 

HEN:    SHORT, 
,  JOSEPH   JEWETT, 

JN°   STEVENS. 

The  Coiirt  approoves  of  the  retourne  about  HaueriU  &  Salisbury  lyne,  as 
above  is  exprest. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Winnuequassum,  an  Indian,  craving  Thompsons  ^'^^' '"  ^'"' 

nuequassums 

Hand  to  be  restored  to  him  as  his  inheritannc,  altho  the  Court  cannot  see  cawse  peticon. 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  27 


210 


THE  KECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1654. 

1  November. 

[*185.] 

M'  Reyner 
comended  to  y 
new  church  in 
Boston. 


Ans'  to  Capt. 

Fendletons 
petico. 


Ans'  to  Xto- 
pher  Averys 
petico. 


Ans'to 

Concord 

peticon. 


Ana'  to 

Salisbvuy 

petico. 


M'  Nowell  & 
M'  Elliott  to 
asist  or  guide 
^th  ye  choice  of 
a  sagamore  at 
Nashaway. 


Ans'  to  M' 

Stanions 

peticon. 


at  ^sent  to  heare  the  case,  nor  w"'out  heareing  to  restore  the  peticoner  the 
land,  yett  judge  meete  to  give  him  libertje  of  tryall,  in  any  Couit  fit  for  cog- 
nizanc  of  it,  notw^'standing  any  former  acts  of  this  Court  therein. 

*The  Court,  reminding  the  case  of  the  new  church  of  Boston,  and  being 
sensible  of  the  vncomfortablenes  of  theire  fsent  condicon,  for  want  of  a  teach- 
ing officer  amongst  them,  quallified,  according  to  the  wholesome  lawes  heere 
established,  and  being  very  willing  to  affoord  the  best  help  they  caun  in  this 
case,  doe  therefore  propound  the  reuerend  M''  Reyner  vnto  the  sajd  church,  to 
be  by  themselves  treated  w^'all,  as  also  made  chojce  of,  and  called  to  office  in 
case  of  agreement  betweene  them. 

Administracon  to  the  estate  of  John  Watton,  deceased,  is  graunted  to 
Capt  Brjan  Pendleton,  in  ans"'  to  his  petlcSn,  he  bringing  in  to  the  next  Gen- 
nerall  Court  a  true  and  perfect  inventory  of  the  sajd  estate,  that  some  course 
may  be  fiu'ther  taken  for  the  releife  of  the  widdow,  as  the  Court  shall  heere- 
after  judge  meete. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Christopher  Awerey,  the  Court,  vnderstanding 
the  peticoner  is  very  poore  and  aged,  having  nothing  to  pay,  and  that  he  hath 
vsed  his  indeavor  to  haue  his  wife  brought  ouer  to  him,  judge  meete  to  remitt 
his  fine,  and  that  his  peticon  be  receaved  freely. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  Concord,  the  Court  de- 
clares that  they  judge  it  meete  y*  the  toune  retourne  what  quautitje  of  land 
yett  remajnes,  which  they  desier,  and  whither  it  be  free  from  all  other 
graunts. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  toune  of  Salisbury,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  requisite  that  the  toune  of  Hampton  should  haue  legall  no- 
tice to  answer  and  make  theire  clajmes  and  defence  before  any  further  pro- 
ceedings in  the  case. 

Whereas  Shawannon,  saggamore  of  Nashaway,  is  lately  dead,  and  another 
is  now  suddaiuly  to  be  chosen  in  his  roome,  they  being  a  great  people,  that 
haue  submitted  to  this  jurisdiccon,  theire  eyes  being  vppon  two  or  three  of  the 
blood,  one  whereof  is  very  deboist  &  a  drunken  fellow,  &  no  freind  of  y«  Eng- 
lish, another  is  very  hopfull  to  learne  the  tilings  of  Christ,  tliis  Court  doth 
therefore  order,  that  M"'  Increase  Nowell  and  M""  John  Elliott  shall  and  heere- 
by  are  desired  to  repaire  to  the  Indians,  and  labor  by  theire  best  coimsell  and 
perswasion  to  ^vayle  w"^  them  for  the  choosing  of  such  a  one  as  may  be  most 
fitt  to  be  theire  sagamore,  which  would  be  a  good  service  to  y"  countrje. 

In  ans''  to  y"  peticon  of  Anthony  Stanion,  for  the  remittm'  of  the  forfeit- 
ure of  his  fifty  pounds  bond  for  Edward  Colcords  appearanc  at  y*  last  County 
Court  at  Hampton,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meet  to  remitt  ffiarty  pounds  thereof, 


1  November. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  211 

and  orders  him  to  pay  the  attorney  that  prosecuted  against  Edward  Colcord,      1654. 

in  behalf  of  Tho  Moulton,  fivteene  shillings,  &  to  Thomas  Moulton,  for  him- 

selfe  &  wives  attendanc  at  both  Courts,  three  pounds  two  shillings,  and  to 

the  widdow  Blasedall,  for  hir  attendance  as  before,  thirty  sliillings  ;  the  other 

fewer  poimds  thirteene  shillings  to  make  vp  y''  tenn  pounds  he  shall  pay  to 

the  Treasurer  for  y"  charg  of  the  Court. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  Rawson,  the  Court,  in  reference  to  his      P186.] 
service  w""  other  gen'™"  implojed  by  this  Court  to  Wells,  &c?,  doth  graunt  Ans'to 
lilm,  the  id  Edward  Eauson,   two  hundi-ed  ackers  of  vpland  and  meadow,  sons  peticon. 
out    of  all   toune  bounds,  on  Quochecho  Riuer,  aboue  Doner  bounds,  and 
orders  Capt  Brjan  Pendleton  &  Peter  CofFyn  to  lay  it  out. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticSu  of  the  inhabitants  of  Portsmouth,  the  Courts  judgeth  Ans'  to  Ports- 
it  meete  to  referr  the  issue  of  tlie  case  to  a  comittee,  and  to  that  end  haue  ™°°  ^'  ^'""^' 
chosen  M''  Joseph  Jewett,  M"^  Thomas  Bradbury,  and  M'"  Jn"  Saunders,  who 
are  heereby  impowered  to  examine  the  matters  in  difFerenc  betweene  the 
tounes  of  Portsmouth  and  Hampton,  as  touching  the  Ijne  betweene  them,  and 
to  setle  the  same  in  such  a  way  as  may  by  them  be  judged  most  meete,  vppon 
a  full  hearing  of  what  shallbe  alleadged  in  the  case,  and  that  they  make  re- 
tourne  thereof  to  the  next  Court  of  Election,  M''  Joseph  Jewett  to  appointe 
the  time  &  place  of  meeting. 

Wee,  whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  haue,  according  to  the  copy  of  the  M'Bradstreet, 
Comts  order  that  wee  receaved,  lajd  out  for  M'  Symon  Bradstreete  and  Cap?  gens  looo  acres 
Thomas  Wiggens,  the  first  fift  day  of  March  last  past,  vppon  the  north  east  '^■i'^  "'''■ 
side  of  the  great  riuer  at  Nechewanacke,  one  thousand  acres  of  land,  the  most 
part  of  it  being  swampe,  as  wee  suppose,  out  of  all  toune  bounds,  and  other 
particcular  proprietjes,  in  forme  and  manner  as  foUoweth,  that  is  to  say,  twelve 
furlongs  by  the  riuer  side,  the  riuer  being  the  bounds  on  the  south  west  side, 
and  so  to  runne  vp  into  the  woods,  vppon  a  north  east  Ijne,  from  the  sajd  riuer, 
eight  furlongs  and  fouerteene  poles,  vppon  either  side  of  the  lott,  which  is  so 
marked  and  bounded  by  vs. 

HATE   EVILL   NUTTER, 

m'ke 

THO:  T  CANNY. 
The  Court  accepts  and  approoves  of  this  retourne. 
In  ans"'  to   the  peticbn  of  M''  Robert  Jourdan,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  f  "^' *"  ^' 

Jourdans. 

cawse  therein  menc6ned  betweene  M'  Joiu-dan  and  Jn"  Ridgway  be  referred  peticon. 


212  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  54.      to  a  due  trjall  at  the  next  County  Court  at  Yorke,  becawse  this  goQm""  hath 
^       '    not  yett  binn  setled  amongst  them. 
„     ^  '  In  ans"'  to  the  peticou  of  the  new  church  at  Boston,  the  Court  refers  them 

Courts  ans'  to  -^ 

new  church       jq  the  last  ans'^  this  Coui-t  gaue  to  theu-e  former  peticon,  as  their  ans"^  to  this 

peticon. 

peticon. 

Ans'  to  In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  toune  of  Glocester  for  y^  remittm°'  of  a  fine 

G  ocsttpehcon;  jjjjpQgg^  q^  them  by  the  County  Court  at  Ipswich  for  theire  defect  in  not 

fine  remitted.  '■  j  j  r 

ha\ing  match  as  y"  lawe  requires,  the  Court,  being  sattisfied  of  theire  en- 
deavors to  pcure  it,  &  that  now  they  haue  it,  doe  remitt  the  sajd  fine. 
Ans'  to  y»  In  ans"^  to  the  petition  of  the  widdow  Abigail  Ellethrop,  the  Court  doth 

throps  peticon.  ti^ereby  impower  the  next  County  Court  at  Ipswich  to  heare  and  determine 
the  case  betwixt  hir  and  the  execcutors  of  hir  late  husband. 
[*187.]  *Edward  Saunders,  of  Watertoune,  being  indicted  at  the  Court  of  Asist  ■ 

Edwaid  ants,  in  September  last,  for  a  rape  w*""  a  girle,  Ruth  Parsons,  of  the  same 

Saunders, 

judgm'  for        toune,  the  Court  and  jury  not  agreeing  in  the  verdict,  the  case  came  of 
a  use  0     u      course  to   the   Gennerall  Court,  where  both   partjes  appeared.     The  Coiu-t, 
after  they  had  heard  and  pervsed  the  seuerall  testimonjes  brought  in  against 
the  said  Edward  Saunders  for  abusing  the  body  of  the  sajd  Ruth  Parsons,  doe 
not  finde  him  guilty  of  death,  but  justly  deserving  a  high  and  seuere  censure, 
and  doe  therefore  order,  that  he  shall  be  seuerely  whipt,  first,  in  Boston,  the 
■    next  lecture  day,  after  the  lecture  ;  2'^,  in  Water  Toune,  after  some  lecture  or 
other  publicke  meeting,  at  such  tjme  as  M'^  Nowell  shall  appointe,  not  exceed- 
ing thirty  stripes  at  a  tjme  ;  and  also,  that  he  shall  henceforth  weare  a  roape 
about  his  necke,  hanging  downe  two  foote  long,  to  continew  during  the  Courts 
pleasure ;  and  if  he  be  found  aboue  forty  rodd  fi-om  his  house  without  such  a 
roape  as  aforesajd,  then,  for  euery  such  offence  or  neglect,  to  be  whipt  againe 
before  the  three  coinissioners  of  the  toune,  in  the  same  manner  before  exprest, 
by  the  present  connstable. 
Resolution  of  -^  ^^^^  '^^  difficulty  was  retourned  from  the  last  Court  of  Asistants  to  the 

a  question  on    Qennerall  Court,  and  the  qua3stion  was  thus   presented  for  resolution:     A 

Buspition  of 

adultery.  marrjed  woman,  with  hir  husband,  in  another  mans  house,  whom  in  short 

tjme  she,  contrary  to  hir  husbands  liking  and  comand,  enters  into  to  much 
familliaritje  with  at  vnseasonable  tjmes,  whom  she  also  seemes  to  affect  more 
then  hir  husband  ;  hir  husband,  greiving  at  hir  carriage,  departs  from  hir ; 
and  after  his  retourne  was  brought  to  bed  of  a  strong,  liuely,  perfect  child, 
(that  presently  after  its  birth  suckt  and  cijed,  &.&,)  fewer  weekes  and  five  dajes 
short  of  forty  weekes.  The  single  person,  being  accused  and  imprisoned  on 
suspitjon  of  adultery  with  the  marrjed  woman,  giving  bayle  for  his  appear- 
ance, ranne  away.     The  qusestion  is,  whither  heere  be  two  wittnesses,  or  that 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  213 

■which  is  aeqiiipolent  to  it,  to  convict  the  sajd  woman  of  adulteiy.     The  Coiu't      16  54. 
resolued  it  on  the  negative,  that  there  are  not  two  wittnesses  in  the  case,  nor  ''        ' 

any  thing  that  is  tequivolent  thereto. 

Benjamin  Saucer,  a  souldjer,  was  indicted  at  the  Court  of  Asistants  in  Benjamin 
September  last  for  vttering  most  pphane  and  vnheard  of  blasphemy,  saying 
y'  Jehovah  was  the  divlll,  that  he  knew  no  God  but  his  sword ;  the  bench  & 
jviry  differing  in  the  verdict  whither  the  cijiue  was  capitall  or  not,  y"  case  came 
to  the  Court  in  course  to  be  determined ;  the  sajd  Saucer  appeared  before  the 
Court,  and  pleaded  not  guilty ;  the  evidences  were  heard  against  him ;  but  be- 
fore the  Court  came  to  a  sentenc,  the  sajd  Saucer  made  an  escape  out  of 
prison. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  George  Munnings,  the  keeper  of  the  prison,  shall  be  County  Court 
called  to  an  account  about  the  escape  of  the  prisoner,  Benjamin  Saucer,  and  ^^  ^^^^^  j.^^. 
that  he  shall  answer  for  the  same  at  the  next  County  Corut  at  Boston,  vnto  Saucers  escap. 
whom  power  is  heereby  given  to  deale  with  him  as  they  shall  see  the  nierrit 
of  the  cawse,  either  by  fine,  displacing  of  him,  or  otheruise,  if  he  give  not  a 
sufficijent  sattisfactory  answer. 

*Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  Majo''  Robt  Sedgwick  should  be      [*188.] 
sent  -vnto,  and  in  the  name  of  the  Court  desii-ed  to  send  vp  Benjamin  Saucer,  '^^^  Court,  vn- 

■*■  *'  derstanding  y* 

the  blasphemer,  that  he  may  be  deliuered  into  prison  and  to  the  keeper,  from  Saucer  was  in 
whence  ^  made  escape.     The  Courts  minde  was  sent  to  Majo''  Sedgwicke  ac-  church,  sent 

T       1  to  Major 

cordingly.  '. 


Sedgewicke  to 
demand  him. 


To  the  honnored  Gennerall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts. 


Wee,  whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  being  appointed  to  divide  the  lands  Naotucke 

,^  •  1  J  1  1         plantacon. 

at  Naotucke  into  two  plantacons,  wee  accordingly  haue  graunted  to  them  that 
now  first  appeared  to  remoove  thither  to  plant  themselves  on  the  west  side  of 
the  Bluer  Connecticott,  as  they  desired,  and  haue  lajd  out  theire  bounds,  viz.  : 
from  the  litle  meadowe  above  theire  plantacon,  which  meadow  is  called  Capa- 
woiike  or  Mattaom  'tt,  doune  to  the  head  of  the  Mis  which  are  belowe  them, 
reserving  the  lands  on  the  east  side  of  the  sajd  riuer  for  another  plantacon, 
when  God,  by  his  p;  ovidcnce,  shall  so  dispose  thereof,  and  still  remajne, 

Yo'  humble  servants, 

JOHN   PINCHON, 
ELIZUR   HOLJOKE, 
SAMUELL   CHAPIN. 
The  Court  approoves  of  this  retoume. 

The  comission  of  M'  Pinchon,  M'  Holyoke,  &  M'  Chapin  being  expii-«d. 


214^ 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1654. 

1  November. 
M'  Pinchons 
coniission. 


Alls'  to  Sacos 
peticon. 


[*189.] 

20  ac"  of 
meadow  to  M' 
Edm"  Broune. 

Courts  ans^ 
about  losse  of 
corne. 


Ans'  to  Georg 

Munings 

peticon. 


Ans'  to  Left. 
Hudsons 
peticon,  &c. 


and  no  other  substituted  in  thcire  places,  itt  is  therefore  heereby  ordered,  that 
the  sajd  M""  Jn"  Pinchon,  M''  Elizur  Holyoke,  and  M'  Samuell  Chapin  shallbe, 
and  are  heereby,  impowred  as  coinissioners  to  act  at  Spriugfeild,  according  to 
the  coiiiission  formerly  graunted  by  this  Court  to  M"^  Henry  Smith  in  May, 
1651,  they  taking  the  oath  ajopointed  formerly  by  the  Coiu't  in  the  yeare 
1653,  at  some  publicque  meeting  of  at  least  tenn  of  the  inhabitants  of  Spring- 
feild  aforesajd,  and  this  theire  comission  to  continew  till  the  Coiut  take  further 
order  theerein. 

In  answer  to  a  peticon  presented  from  the  inhabitants  of  Saco,  Cape  Por- 
pus,  &  Wells,  in  reference  to  the  erecting  of  a  prison  and  other  charges  there, 
itt  is  ordered,  for  mutuall  peace  and  good  of  the  sajd  tounes,  that  the  seuerall 
tonnes  liable  to  this  charge  about  the  prison  shall,  for  each  toune,  choose  one 
man  to  see  that  on  the  bringing  in  of  an  account  of  the  estates  of  each  toune 
according  therevnto,  a  just  proportion  may  be  levj'ed  on  each,  to  which  the 
deputjes  for  those  parts  doe  concurre,  &  doe  present  these  persons  vnder- 
writteu  for  the  worke  :  for  Kittery,  Richard  Nacy ;  for  Cape  Porpus,  Griffen 
Montague ;  for  Saco,  Eobt  Booth ;  ffor  York,  Abraham  Preble ;  for  Wells, 
Jonathan  Thing  ;  who  are  heereby  impowred  to  attend  what  is  just  and  aequall 
heerein,  tending  to  the  effecting  hereof,  and  that  they  shall  also  take  an  ac- 
count of  the  late  Treasiuer  about  the  rate  of  the  two  late  Courts,  and  rectify 
the  same,  chargeing  to  each  toune  theire  due  proportion,  according  to  the  cus- 
tome  of  the  countrje  rates. 

*Graunted  to  ]\P  Edmond  Broune,  his  heires  and  assignes  for  euer,  two 
smale  parcells  of  meadow,  not  exceeding  twenty  acres,  lying  on  the  southside 
of  Sudbury  bounds,  on  the  northside  of  the  riuer. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Justinian  Houlding,  Jn°  Coolige,  Jacob  Greene, 
and  W"  INIaning,  craving  allowance  for  losse  in  shrincking  of  corne  in  theire 
hands,  itt  is  ordered,  that  each  toune  beare  theire  oune  losse,  and  doe  order 
the  selectmen  of  euery  toune  to  act  heerein,  so  that  the  proportions  of  losse 
and  charge  may  be  equally  be  borne  by  particcular  persons. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  George  Munnings,  craving  allowance  ffor  his 
attendanc  on  &  dietting  Daniell  Gunn,  y'  djed  of  the  French  disease,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  meet  to  allow  the  sajd  Munnings  tenn  shillings  a  weeke,  he 
accounting  with  the  audito',  who  shall  signe  him  a  bill  for  the  payment  of  it 
out  of  the  next  countrje  rate  to  the  Treasurer. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Left  W"  Hudson  &  Evan  Thomas,  the  Court 
judgeth  it  meete  to  remitt  the  forfeitui-es  of  theii'e  bonds,  but  see  no  cawse  to 
remitt  them  theire  fines. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Lef  I  Apleton,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Majo'  Denni- 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS   BAY    IN   NEW  ENGLAND.  215 

son,  Cap?  Atherton,  and   Cap?   Norton  shall   and   heereby  are   appointed  a      1654. 

coinittce  to  examine  all  the  accompts  of  M''  Henry  Dunster  in  reference  to    ' ■> ' 

the  estate  of  M'  Josse  Glouer,  deceased,  or  what  his  wife  left,  or  what  else    ^  ^°'''"'''"- 

A  coiiiittee  to 

may  concerne  the  estate  contended  for  by  the  two  eldest  sonues  of  the  sajd  examine  M' 
Josse  Glouer,  or  any  other  whom  it  may  concerne,  making  theire  report  to  the  cop"'n  rlfer- 
next  Gennerall  Court.  '^"'^ '"  ^^' 

Josse  Glofls 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Cap?  Robt  Bridges,  itt  is  ordered,  that  warrant  e'^tate. 
shall  issue  out  of  this  Court  to  M-^  Edward  Tins  &  the  rest  of  the  adminis-  t"^!  *"  ^''''.*' 

°  Bndges  peti- 

trato"  to  the  estate  of  Capt  W""  Ting,  requiring  them  to  bring  in  the  originall  ^<"»- 
books  of  the  sajd  Cap?  Ting,  wherein   M'^  Woodcocks  accompts  &  credit  is, 
that  they  may  be  pvsed  by  the  Court,  &  a  coppie  thereof  taken  &  given  to  the 
sajd  Cap?  Bridges. 

The  Court,  having  pervsed  and  examined  the  seuerall  retournes  concern-  Courts  judg- 
ing the  peticoners  in  Lef?  Pikes  case,  doe  order,  that  the  persons  heerevnder  "^i'.'°." 

^  conussioners 

menconed  be  suiiioned  by  warrant  from  the  clarks  of  the  seuerall  County  '•e'°"™<= 
Courts  to  which  they  belong,  and  to  give  bond  to  the  value  of  tenn  pounds  a  Coners  in  LeP 
man  to  give  answer  for  theire  seuerall  offences  before  the  sajd  County  Courts,  fa°e!  ^""^^ 
wko  shall  haue  full  power  to  issue  the  same  as  they  in  theiie  wisedomes  shall 
judge  most  meete :  — 

Newbury:  Jn"  Emery,  Sen,  Salisbury:   Samuell  Hallis, 

Jn°  Hull,  Pliilip  Chalice, 

Jn°  Bishop,  Joseph  Fletcher, 

Benjamin  Swett,  Samuell  Gechalls, 

Daniell  Thu-ston,  Juii,  Andrew  Grely, 

Joseph  Plomer,  George  Martin. 

Daniell  Cheny,  Hampton :   Christopher  Hussee, 

Jn"  Wilcott.  Jn°  Samborne. 

*The  Court  wrote  a  letter  to  his  highnes  Oliuer,  Lord  Protector  of  the     [*190.] 
coinonwealth  of  England,  &(5,  w<='>  is  recorded  in  the  comt  booke  of  reccords 
for  letters,  &6. 

In  the   case  betweene  Nathaniell  Boulter,  plaintiffe,  and    Robt    Lord,  Courts  judgm' 
defendt,   the   Court,   vppon  a  full  hearing   of  the   case,   did  fiiide  for  the  '^J^°^^"^ 
plaintiffe. 

On  the  mocSn  of  M"-  W"  Parks,  administrator  to  the  estate  of  M""  James  Courts  judg- 
Astwood,  deceased,  the  Court  appointed  Cap?  Eliazer  Lusher  and  Cap?  Brjan  Altwoldstre 
Pendleton  a  coinittee  to  examine  the  accompts  referring  to  that  estate,  and 
make  retoui'ne  of  theire  thoughts  concerning  that  part  of  the  estate  afore- 


216 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1654. 

\  TNovember. 


Courts  judg- 
ment in  M' 
Gyffords  case. 

9 ;  9  mo,  54. 


Keference  to 
ye  oQseers  to 
jjvde  M' 
Chancy  a 
howse,  &c. 


[*191.] 

Troopers  al- 
lowd  for  their 
service  ag* 
Ninigr'. 


Comittee  to  lay 
out  the  mil- 
litary. 


sajd,  that  by  lawe  is  due  to  the  wlddow  of  the  sajd  James,  w"''  is  the  third 
part  of  the  howses  and  lands,  for  terme  of  Hfe  ;  they  retourned  that,  according 
to  the  value  the  sajd  houses  and  lands  were  sould  for,  being  two  hundred 
twenty  five  pounds  fower  shilUng  and  1|'^,  hir  proporcon  being  allowed  after 
the  rate  of  five  pounds  p  cen?,  and  accoumpted  as  continewed  the  terme  of 
seven  yeeres,  amounts  to  twenty  six  pounds  seven  shillings  fower  pence, 
by  virtue  of  a  Court  order,  deliuered  to  hir  by  the  administrator ;  twenty 
three  pounds  five  shillings  and  eight  penc,  and  more,  in  seuerall  goods 
taken  by  the  sajd  widdow  without  the  knowledg  of  the  administrator;  as  is 
testified  vnder  the  hands  of  M'  Stoddard  and  M"'  Ting,  twenty  pounds  sixteene 
shillings  and  sixepence  ;  so  that  it  appeared  to  them  that  the  widdow  had  re- 
ceaved  of  the  estate,  more  then  hir  proporcon,  the  full  some  of  seventeene 
pounds  fowerteene  shillings  and  tenn  penc  ;  and  whereas  she  should  haue 
receaved  hir  part  annually,  and  but  for  terme  of  life  only,  she  hath  carried 
tliis  whole  soine  already  out  of  the  country  ;  wherefore  they  conceaved  that  the 
remajnder  of  the  whole  estate  should  be  free  from  all  clajme,  demand,  or  title 
by  the  sajd  widdow,  or  by  any  in  hir  behalfe  to  be  made.  The  Court  ap- 
prooved  of  the  coinittees  retourne,  and  ordered  the  legall  assiu-ance  be  made 
to  the  purchasers  of  the  sajd  howses  and  lands,  w'^^  were  the  estate  of  the  sajd 
James  Astwood,  according  to  the  contract  made  betwixt  the  administrator  and 
the  purchasers. 

In  the  case  depending  betweene  M'  Jn"  Gyfford  and  the  comissioners  for 
the  iron  workes,  the  whole  Court,  meeting  together,  did,  by  theire  voat,  judge 
meete  to  confirme  the  actings  of  the  audito'^%  vppon  the  accompts  betwixt  the 
sajd  Jn°  Gyfford  and  his  principalis,  so  farre  as  they  haue  possitively  issued  the 
same,  waving  for  the  present  the  allegations  about  theire  couenants. 

The  Court,  having  considered  of  the  mocon  that  hath  binn  made  in  be- 
half of  M''  Chancy,  for  the  providing  of  a  howse  &  other  accoinodac&ns  for 
his  setlement  at  Cambridge,  doe  judg  meete  to  referr  what  yett  reraajnes  to 
be  donne  to  the  honnored  &  reuerend  ouerseers,  to  whom  it  most  propperly 
belongs. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Jn°  Wisewall  and  W"  Parks  shall  &  heereby  are  ap- 
pointed a  comittee  w""  the  audito""  gennerall  to  examine  the  bill  of  y^  seuerall 
troopers  that  lately  went  on  the  late  expedition  against  Ninnicraft,  to  signe  all 
theire  just  bills,  and  to  deduct  w'  they  haue  had  of  the  x  dler,  the  original! 
bill  of  particculars  being  on  the  file. 

Whereas  there  be  a  thowsand  acres  of  land  graunted  to  the  artillery  com- 
pany, anno  1618,  and  is  not  yett  lajd  out,  and  whereas  there  is  a  graunt  to 
Cambridge  of  land  for  farmers,  betweene  Cambridg  and  Concord,  itt  is  now 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  217 

ordered  by  this  Court,  that  M"'  Edward  Hutchinson,  Sen,  ]\I''  Thomas  Danford,      1  G  5  4. 
and  John  Sherman,  survejor,  shall  vejue  the  ground  and  sett  out  the  thowsand    '       ">    ~^ 
acres  according  to  graunt,  with  as  litle  ^judice  to  a  plantacon  as  may  be,  and 
so  make  retourne  thereof  to  the  next  Gennerall  Court,  in  May  ;  or  in  case 
they  cannot  finde  out  land  according  to  the  graunt,  and  then  also  to  make 
theu'e  retourne  also. 

The  Court  ordered  Major  Willard  to  haue  allowed  him  sixe  pounds  Major  Wiiiards 
eighteene  shillings,  as  a  recompenc  for  his  servic  on  the  Narragansett  expe- 
dicbn,  and  Cap?  Davis  five  pounds  tenn  shillings.  Left  Peeter  Oliuer  three 
pounds  fiveteene  shillings,  Cornet  Stednian  three  pounds,  Marshall  Wajte, 
coiiiissary,  fforty  five  shillings ;  the  rest  of  the  souldjers  recompenc  are 
on  file. 

The  Court  is  adjourned  to  the  lO""  of  Nouember,  1654. 


^tt  the  third  Sessions  of  the  Gennerall  Court  of  Elections,  held  at  20  November. 
Boston,  the  20"'  of  JVouember,  1654. 

Pkesent,  Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,  Go:,  Capt  Eol)t  Bridges, 

M'  Increase  Nowell,  Capt  Tho  Wiggins, 

M''  Synion  Bradstreet,  Capt  Humpluy  Atherton, 

M'^  Safii  Symons,  Majo''  Symo  Willard. 


A 


TT  this  Court  appeared  Capt  Roht  Keajne  &  M''  Edw  Hutchinson,  at-  21"'  9  mo, 
tourney  for  M"^  Josiali  Winslow,  as  deputjes  &  attournejcs  for  the  vnder- 
takers  of  the  iron  works,  plaintifFes,  and  M""  John  GyfTord,  late  agent  to  the 
sajd  vndertakers,  defendt ;  and  after  the  Court  had  heard  what  the  partjes 
could  and  did  say,  the  originall  attachments  were  read,  y"  verdict  of  the 
County  Court  at  Boston  therevppon  :  — 

I.  Itt  was  putt  to  the  question,  whither  the  Court  be  sattisfied  y'  M"'  Jn" 
GyfFord  was  agent  for  the  vndertakers  of  the  ironworkes.  Itt  was  resolved  on 
the  affirmative. 

2  qsEst.   Itt  was  putt  to  the  quajstlon,  whither  the  Court  be  sattisfied  that         22"'. 
M"^  Jn"  Gj-fFord  was  sued  at  the  last  County  Court  as  agent.     Itt  was  resolved 

on  the  affirmative  by  the  whole  Court  met  together. 

3  qufest.  Itt  was  also  at  the  same  tjme  put  to  the  quaestion  by  the  whole 
Court  mett  together,  whither  so  much  as  is  or  shallbe  charged  on  ^I""  Jn" 
GyfFord,  or  he  chargeth  himselfe  withall,  in  reference  to  the  iron  workes, 
he  ought  not  to  discharge  himselfe  according  to  his  orders  and   instructjoiis 

\i)L.   IV.  —  r.viiT  I.  28 


218  THE  KECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  54.      from  liis  principalis.     Itt  was  resolved  on  the  affirmative,  that  he  ought  so  to 
charge  himselfe. 
In  aus'"  to  the  peticoii  of  Rofct  HarJiug,  desiring  that  his  bond  might  be 


22  November. 
Ans'  to  Capt. 

Hardig  deliuered  vp  to  him  againe,  w'^''  he  gave  for  his  ajipearanc,  &5,  before  this 

petiCoii. 

Court,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary  shall  give  the  petiooner  vp  his  bond. 

■1  qusest.   Whither  the  attachments  not  distinguishing  Jn°  Gyffijrd  vnder 
the  terme  of  agent  doe  make  the  plaintiffs  liable  to  a  iion  suit,  referring  to  the 
action.      This  qua;stion  Mas  resolved  by  the  whole  Court  on  the  negative. 
[*195.]  *Itt  is  ordered,  that  Rich  Bellingham,  Ys^,  Gofln'',  M-^   Nowell,  Capt 

Atherton,  Capt  Clarke,  Deacon  Wisewall,  and  Deacon  Parkes  shall  &  hereby 
are  desired  and  impowred  to  treate  Math,  procure,  and  establish  a  fitt  person 
to  be  keeper  of  the  prison  in  steede  of  George  ISIunnings,  making  agreement 
w""  such  a  pson,  not  exceeding  twenty  pounds  p  annu  sallery. 

Itt  was  put  to  the  question,  whither  the  wo'pff'^  Rich  Bellingham, 
Es^,  and  M"'  Increase  Newell  be  capable  of  voating  in  the  case  depending 
betwixt  Capt  Keajne  &  M''  Winslow,  plaintiffs,  and  Jn°  Gyfford,  defendant, 
in  reference  to  pretended  relacons.  Itt  was  resolved  on  the  affirmative  by  the 
whole  Coiute. 

Itt  was  also  put  to  the  qucestion,  whither  this  Courte,  in  the  case  of  the 
vndertakers  of  the  iron  works,  by  theire  dep",  plaintiffs,  &  ]\I'^  Jn°  Gifford, 
defendant,  would  so  accept  of  the  first  auditt  as  to  beginne  where  they 
left,  reserving  the  plaintives  just  liberty  in  point  of  plea  for  damage  in  theire 
second  action  for  the  defendants  not  following  his  orders  and  instruccons.  Itt 
was  resolved  on  the  affirmative  by  the  whole  Court. 
L.t.  Phillips  AVhereas  this  Court  hath  lajd  an  impost  on  wjnes  imported  into  any  part 

of  tliis  jurisdiccon,  as  in  title  Impost,  in  the  first  printed  booke,  appeares, 
and  that  of  late  they  liaue  lett  to  farme  the  sajd  imposts  to  Capt  W"  Hauthorne, 
Capt  Jn°  Leuerett,  Left  W™  Phillips,  &6,  and  that  no  person  seemes  now  to 
be  impowred  to  take  the  forfeitures  that  in  such  cases  maybe  made,  itt  is 
therefore  ordered,  that  Left  W"  Phillips  shall  and  is  heereby  impowred,  ac- 
cording to  that  lawe  in  referenc  to  the  imposts,  to  take  all  forfeitures  that 
hath  binn,  shall,  or  may  be  made  in  any  part  of  this  jurisdiction  during  the 
tjme  of  theire  contract,  and  to  appointe  one  or  more  deputjcs  vnder  him,  in 
any  part  of  this  jurisdiction,  to  demand  or  receive  the  due  imposts,  according 
to  lawe,  of  any  person  or  persons  whatsoeuer ;  and  on  refusall  of  payment  or 
entry  according  as  the  lawe  requires,  to  make  seizure,  and  by  suites  in  any 
Court  of  this  jurisdiction  to  recouer  his  or  theire  full  dues,  according  to  lawe, 
and  this  to  continew  in  force  till  the  Court  take  further  order 
2i:  That  fmther  tare  and  more  full  provission  may  by  lawe  be  made  then  is 


y  officer  to 
rec.  imposts, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  219 

already  for  the  sujipressiug  the  most  odious  &  abominable  sinne  of  blasiihemy,      165  4. 

as  also  the  vncleanc  and  wicked  practizes  of  abusing  young  glrles  vnder  tenn    "" — '* ^ 

yeares  of  age,  and  forcing  or  ravishing  of  damosells  above  that  aec,  itt  is  or-  "  _  "■"=mber. 

°  Comittee  to 

dered,  that  M'  Nowcl),  Capt  Atherton,  Cap?  Thomas  Clarke,  Capl  Eliazer  p'pare  a  law  ag' 
Lusher,  and  M'  Edward  Jackson,  be  a  coiuittee  to  advise  with  some  of  the     ''^^  ^"y-^  '^• 
reuerend  elders  in  referenc  to  the  above  meneoned  cases,  to  prepare,  di-awe 
up,  and  present  to  the  next  Gennerall  Court  what  they  judge  meete  to  be 
passed  as  lawes  for  the  reformation  of  the  evills  above  sajd. 

Capt  Robt  Kaine,  plaintifie,  &  INP  .In"  G^-fford,  defendant,  being  in  Court 
&  pleading  to  thcirc  case,  the  Court  demaunded  of  the  id  Jn°  Gyfford,  the  de- 
feudat,  that  he  would  show  his  orders  and  instruccons  to  proove  his  oune 
charge  of  expences,  guifts,  &c,  W^i*  he  absolutely  refused  ;  and  when  the 
Court  mooved  him  to  give  a  particcular  ansiver,  to  ease  the  coulor  of  deceipt 
in  mowing  forty  acres  of  grasse  for  sixe  catle  only,  (if  he  could,)  which  he 
had  confessed,  he  sajd  he  had  answered  to  the  aucht,  &  would  ans"-  no  other- 
uise.  The  Court  therevppon  declared,  that  then  they  should  examine  as  they 
might,  and  judge  accordingly. 

♦After  the  whole  Court  had  heard  what  the  plaintiffs  &  defendants  [*193.] 
could  say,  &  pvsed  seuerall  of  the  evidences  &  audito'*  retourne,  they  pro-  Courts  narra- 
ceeded  as  foli  :  Whereas  there  is  an  acCon  of  thirteene  thowsand  pounds  vppon  Giffords  case, 
accoumpt  depending  in  this  Court  bet^vixt  M'  Josiah  Wiuslow  &  Capt  Robt 
Keayne,  deputjes  and  attoumeys  for  the  vndertakers  of  the  ii-on  workes',  plaintiffs, 
against  'M'  Jn"  Gifford,  late  agent,  defendant,  the  Coiu-t  findes  that,  vppon  the 
sajd  Giffords  presenting  his  bookes  of  accompt  in  a  County  Court  by  thciie  order, 
where  the  action  was  first  coinenced,  the  sajd  Coiut  refer*  the  auditting  of 
the  sajd  accompts  to  certaine  select  meete  persons,  who,  having  spent  much 
tjme  about  the  same,  made  a  retourne  so  farr  as  they  had  pceeded,  but  left  the 
consideracon  of  many  particculars  in  IM'  Giffords  charge,  w'^  they  wanted 
evidenc  to  passe,  to  the  valcw  of  three  thowsand  five  hundred  seventy-two 
pounds  sixteene  shillings  and  eleven  pence,  to  the  consideracon  and  determina- 
tion of  the  Court ;  but  this  soiTie  consisting  of  too  many  pticculars  for  the  Couit 
to  examine,  was  againe  referred,  together  -nith  the  effects  of  the  iron  workes, 
to  other  aucUto",  who,  after  much  tjme  expended  about  the  same,  made  theu-e 
retourne,  and  left  the  defendant  debto''  vppon  the  whole  the  soine  heereafter 
exprest,  against  yv'^  the  plaintiffs  made  many  just  and  considerable  objections, 
which  occasioned  this  Court  to  enter  into  a  more  strict  consideracSn  &  exam- 
ination of  the  whole  accompt,  wherein  they  finde  many  false  charges,  vast  ex- 
pences &  guifts,  some  tonns  of  iron  disposed  of  more  then  he  gives  the  iron 
works  creditt  for,  the   proffitt  of  the  ffiirme,  &c',  which  he  made  vse  of  for 


220  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1654.      himself,  not  brought  to  acco',  together  with  diuerse  other  improbable  dlsburs- 
"       "I        '    meiits  putt  vppon  accoumpt.     The  Court  also  found  that  the  last  audito"  had 
respect  only  to  the  accoumpts  as  they  stood  in  the  bookes,  without  reference  to 
the  defendant  orders  or  coiiiission,  and  so  issued  the  same  in  an  arbitrary  way, 
and  much  of  it  w^'out  proofe,  which  this  Court  could  not  allow  off;  but  after 
much  tjme  spent  about  tliis  case,  finding  the  whole  accoumpts  intricate,  &  very 
many  of  the  particculars  contcyned  in  fowcr  papers  left  by  the  first  auditers  to 
the  determinacon  of  the  Court,  to  the  valew  of  three  thowsand  five  hundred 
seventy  two  pounds  sixteene  shillings  &  eleven  pence,  very  doubtful  and  sus- 
pitious,  the  plaintiflTs  also  objecting  against  the  whole  as  being  donne  w*out 
order,  and  the  defendant  peremptorily  refusing  to  shew  his  order  or  comission 
Courts  judgm'  for  the  Same,  the  Court  judged  it  meete  to  order,  that  the  defendant  should 
'"  ^     I'         be  allowed  two  thousand  and  five  hundred  pounds  out  of  the  fewer  papers, 
and  that  execution  issue  out  from  this  Court  for  the  plaintiffs  for  the  rest,  to- 
gether with  the  eight  hundred  and  odd  pounds,  exprest  in  the  foote  of  the 
audit,  leaving  the  defendant  to  his  liberty,  by  due  proofe,  according  to   his 
orders  and  instructions,  to  proove  what  he  may  or  cann  more,  the  defendant 
paying  the  workemens  wages,  and  giving  securitje  for  the  same. 
W"  Salter  Itt  is  ordered,  that  Willjam  Salter,  of  Boston,  shallbe  keeper  of  the  prison, 

and  be  allowed  twenty  pounds  p  anii,  and  the  removing  of  his  goods  from  his 
present  dwelling  vnto  the  prison  house,  and  his  sallary  shallbe  pajd  vnto  him 
quarterly,  «&  that  some  stocke  be  forthwith  lajd  in  for  releife  of  such  prisoners 
as  are  or  may  be  imprisoned,  as  in  such  case  hath  binn  heeretofore ;  and  the 
said  Salter  shall  give  vnto  the  Court  a  quarters  warning  at  the  end  of  any 
yeare,  when  he  shallbe  minded  to  leave  the  prison,  that  so  the  prison  may  not 
be  vnprovlded. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  2"^  action  for  breach  of  couenants,  &S,  in  referenc 
to  M''  Jn°  Gyfford,  in  y'  case  of  the  iron  works,  be  referred  to  the  next  Gen- 
nerall  Court  in  May  next. 
[*194.]  *The  Coint  being  informed   that  the  countrje  is  like  to  pay  the  rate 

wholly  in  Indian  corne  to  the  countrje  rate,  in  Indian  corne  at  three  shillings  p 
bushell,  w"""^  is  not  really  worth,  nor  will  passe  from  man  to  man,  aboue  two 
shillings  and  sixepence  p  bushell,  so  that  men  who  haue  trusted  the  countrje, 
or  haue  ought  to  receave  from  the  countrje  as  theire  just  due,  will  loose  neere  a 
fifth  part  of  what  in  justice  they  might  expect,  and  ought  to  haue,  itt  is 
therefore  ordered,  that  all  the  Indian  corne  that  is  or  shall  be  brought  into  the 
Treasurer  or  his  order  before  the  tenth  of  ]\Iarch  next,  shall  be  accompted 
but  at  two  shillings  eight  pence  p  bushell,  and  what  shall  be  pd  after  that 
time  shall  be  accepted  at  three  shillings  p  bushell. 
The  Court  is  dissolved. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  221 


Att  a   Gennerall   Court  of  Eleccon,  held  at  Boston,    23^  of  May,     16  55. 

1655. 


23  May. 


were  chosen  Assistants,  &  tooke  there  oathes. 
Y*  Gofl  gave  him  his  oath  24  Janu,  1655. 
was  chosen  Majo'  Gennerall. 


JOHN  ENDECOTT,  Escp,  was  chosen  GoQuo',  &  tooke  liis  oath. 
Rich  BeUingham,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep'  GoQ,  &  tooke  his  oathe. 
M'  Symon  Bradstreet, 
M"^  Increase  Nowell, 
M'^  Samuell  Symonds, 
Cap?  Ro'bt  Bridges, 
Cap?  Thomas  Wiggin, 
Cap?  Daniell  Gookin, 
Majo"'  Daniell  Dennison, 
Ttlajo'"  Symon  Willard, 
Cap?  Humphrey  Ather- 

ton, 

M"'  Symon  Bradstreet,        ]  were  chosen  Comissioners  for  the  Vnited  Col- 
Majo''  Daniell  Dennison,   J  lonjes. 

M'  Edward  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretary. 

M'^  Richard  Russell  was  chosen  Treasurer. 

The  names  of  the  Depu**'  retoumd  from  y"  seuerall  tonnes  to  serve  at  y'  Court. 

For  Salem :  M--  Edmond  Batter,  M'  Rich  Russell. 

Charlestoun  :  Cap?  Francis  Norton. 

Dorchester  :  Lef?  Roger  Clapp. 

Boston  :  Cap?  Tho  Sauadge,  Cap?  Tho  Clarke. 

Roxbury  :  M"'  PhiUp  Elliott,  M"'  Edward  Dennison. 

Watertoune :  M'^  Richard  Broune,  M"'  Ephrajm  Childe. 

Lynne :  M'  Thomas  Lajton,  M''  Jn"  Fuller. 

Cambridg  :  M"'  Edw  Collins,  M'  Rich  Jackson. 

Ipswich  :  M"  Joseph  Medcalf,  M'  Georg  Giddings. 

Newbury :  W™  Titcombe. 

Weimouth :  James  Nash. 

Hingham  :  M""  Jerre  Houchin. 

Concord ':  M"^  Robt  Merriam. 

Dedham  :  Cap?  Eliazer  Lusher. 

Salisbury  :  INI--  Samuell  Hall. 

Hampton  :  Henry  Dow. 

Rowley :  Maximilian  Jewett. 


222 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


Braintije  :  Cap?  Rich  Bracket. 
Douer  :  M"^  Valentine  Hill. 
Woobourne  :  Capt  Edward  J  ohnson. 
Maiden  :  M""  Joseph  Hills. 
Kittery :  M'  John  Wincoll. 
Yorke  :  M'  Edward  Rushworth. 

M"^  Richaixl  Russell,  Speaker  to  y''  Depu'^ 


[*195.] 

Selectmen  to 
ap*  measurers 
of  come,  wood, 
He. 


A  house  of 

correccon  in 
each  county. 


Selectmens 
power  to  regu- 
lat  porters. 


CoiSittee  of 
militia  & 
selectmens 
power  to  re- 
paire  forts,  &c, 
by  lev)',  &c. 


*This  Couitj  taking  into  theire  consideracbns  the  complaints  of  seuerall  in 
reference  to  the  abuses  coiiiitted  by  diuers  seamen,  who,  bringing  corne  from 
Conecticott  &  other  places,  so  measure  the  same  as  by  experjence  is  found 
will  not  yeeld  so  much,  though  presently  measured  agaiue,  by  fewer  or  five 
p  ceirl,  and  further,  considering  the  abuse  that  is  in  cording  of  wood  & 
measuring  of  boards,  doe  therefore  order,  that  it  shall  be  in  the  power  of  the 
selectmen  of  Boston,  Charlestoune,  and  Salem,  &  such  tounes  w^'in  this  juris- 
diccon  as  shall  see  cawse  so  to  doe,  to  appointe  one,  two,  or  more,  as  neede 
shall  require,  who  shall  be  sworne  faithfully  &  vprightly  to  measure  such 
corne,  boards,  &  wood  as  they  shall  be  called  vnto,  and  that  no  man  shall  be 
forced  to  recejve  any  come,  wood,  or  boards,  except  they  agree  therevnto,  but 
such  as  is  measiu'ed  by  such  person  or  persons  so  appointed  and  sworne^  the 
partjes  receiuing  the  corne,  boards,  or  wood  paying  for  the  measuring  thereof. 

For  prevention  and  redresse  of  many  misdemeano'''  and  evill  practizes 
dayly  increasing,  to  the  dishonnor  of  God  and  damage  of  the  countrje,  itt  is 
ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  there  shall  be  a  howse 
of  correction  provided  in  each  coiuity  at  the  countjes  charge,  to  be  setled, 
ordered,  and  improoved  as  the  magistrates  in  each  County  Court  or  Court 
of  Asistan*^  shall  agree  and  direct  vnto,  A-ntill  this  Court  take  farther  order 
therein. 

There  being  a  very  great  abuse  in  the  tounes  of  Boston  &  Charles  Toune 
by  reason  such  persons  who  take  vppon  them  the  name  and  implojment  of 
porters  doe  many  times  require  &  exact  aboue  that  which  is  just  and  righteous 
for  theire  labo",  for  the  redressing  whereof  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that 
from  henceforth  the  selectmen  of  the  sajd  tounes,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  shall 
haue  power  to  regulate  in  this  case,  and  to  state  theire  wages  as  in  theire  vn- 
derstandings  shall  be  most  just  and  aequall,  as  also  to  determine  what  persons 
shall  be  implojed  therein. 

This  Court,  considering  that  there  are  in  many  tounes  seuerall  peeces  of 
ordinanc  which  lye  vnmounted,  or  not  sufficyently  mounted  and  fitted  with 
appurtenuces   fitt  for  seruice,  also  some  forts  and  batterjes  that  are  out  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  223 

repaier,  doe  therefore  order,  that  such  great  gunns,  forts,  or  batterjes  as  the  1655. 
coinittee  of  militja  &  selectmen  shall  sec  necessary  for  the  securitje  of  the  sajd  '  ''  ^ 
tounes  for  to  mount  or  repajer,  the  selectmen  of  the  sajd  tonne  are  heereby 
jcquired  &  impowred  for  to  make  and  levy  on  the  estate  of  the  sajd  toune 
according  to  proportion  of  the  countrje  rate,  which  levye  shallbe  gathered  by 
the  counstable  of  the  sajd  toune,  &  by  them  coinitted  into  the  hands  of  the 
Treasurez",  or  constable  if  appointed  to  be  the  Treasurer,  of  the  sajd  toune  for 
the  vse  aforesajd. 

Itt  is  ordered,  the  secretary  shall  issue  out  warrants  to  the  connstables  of  Secret  order  to 
the  seuerall  tounes  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon  to  send  him  a  true  list  of  all  the  males  counstable  to 
•w^'in  theire  respective  tounes,  from  sixteene  yeares  of  age  to  sixty,  before  the  ^"'"^ '"  '^  '"*' 

'■  ■'  o  J>  of  yo  males,  &c. 

first  of  August  next ;  and  if  any  connstable  shall  neglect  to  make  retourne  as 
aforesajd,  he  shall  forfeite  five  pounds  to  the  tresury. 

To  the  constable  of  B. 

Whereas  by  the  articles  of  confocderacon  the  coiuon  charges  of  the  con- 
fcederates  are  to  be  borne  by  the  seuerall  colonjes  in  proportion  to  the  noum- 
ber  of  theire  males  from  16  yeares  to  sixty,  and  theire  being  accompts  to  be 
made  vp  at  the  next  meeting  of  the  coiiiissioners,  yow  are  therefore  heereby 
required  to  send  in  a  list  of  the  noumber  of  the  males  as  abouesajd  w"'in  j-our 
toune,  before  the  first  of  August  next,  to  the  secretary,  that  the  whole  noum- 
ber of  males  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon  may  be  certified  to  the  coiiiissioners  be- 
fore their  next  meeting,  vnder  his  hand ;  &  hereof  yow  are  not  to  faile  at  yo'' 
perrill. 

•There  being  information  given  to  this  Court  that  whereas  there  hath  L  l"o.] 
binn  formerly  some  gratuitjes  given  to  this  colony  by  some  that  haue  binn  °°".  ™fj°j. 
wellwishers  to  this  couutije  in  England,  and  that  there  is  yett  remayning  some  y"  countrjes 

due  by  gratu- 

part  of  the  same  vndisposed  of,  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  M'  Joseph  itjes. 
Metcalf  &  M'  George  Gettings  be  authorized  to  enquire  into  this  bulsenes,  and 
to  finde  out  what  may  be  due  to  the  countrje  in  this  or  any  other  way,  and  the 
deputjes  of  euery  toune  are  alike  authorized  to  make  the  lilie  enquiry,  that  so 
all  may  be  brought  to  light,  and  make  theire  retoumes  of  what  they  find  in 
this  case  to  the  next  sessions  of  this  Court. 

Itt  is  desired,  that  whosoeuer  shallbe  chosen  Goflno'^  from  yeare  to  yeare  GoQuo'to 
shall,  w*""  the  first  opportunitjc,  make  his  aboade  in  Boston,  or  some  adjacent  ^^^^^  Boston, 
toune  or  place  v/^Hn  fewer  or  five  miles  of  Boston,  and  shall  there  continue 
his  aboad  during  the  tjme  of  his  goQnment,  that  so  he  may  be  the  more  ser- 
vicable  vnto  the  countrje  in  gennerall,  both  in  respect  of  straungers  &  other- 


224 


THE    RECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OP 


165i 


23  May. 

Essex  regi- 
ment to  be  ex- 
cersised  y" 
yeare. 

Pcenalty  for  y" 
magis^s  & 
deputj*  absent 
from  Court. 


Uep'  Gofln', 
M'  Symonds, 
&(;,  comission 
to  take  vnd'  y» 
goQm*  such  as 
are  Tv^^in  oiu: 
lyne,  &c. 


Comittee  ab' 
Bait. 


wise,  any  custome  or  vsage  to  the  contrary  notw*''standing ;  and  the  present 
Gouno''  is  desired  to  reside  at  Boston,  or  neare  therevnto,  as  much  as  his  oiuie 
necessary  occasions  will  permitt. 

Itt  was  resolved,  on  the  qufcstion,  that  Essex  regiment  should  be  excer- 
cised  this  yeare,  &  so  the  other  regiments  successively. 

Forasmuch  as  by  a  late  lawe  such  deputjes  as  shall  accept  his  choice  to 
that  service  doth  forfeite  twenty  shillings  a  day  for  euery  days  default  for 
not  attending  on  the  service  of  the  countrje,  and  that  the  presence  of  the 
magistrates  is  more  necessary  then  any  deputjes,  it  is  ordered,  that  no  magis- 
trate shall  be  absent  from  the  Gennerall  Court  otherwise  then  any  deputje 
maybe,  on  pcenalty  of  forty  shillings  a  day,  as  In  the  sajd  lawe  is  expfssed 
for  deputjes,  w*''out  the  consent  of  both  howses. 

Eichard  Bellinghara,  Es^,  Dep'  GoQ,  INI''  Samuel  Symonds,  &  Capt 
Tho  Wiggins,  or  any  two  of  them,  are  heereby  appointed,  w"»  the  associates 
for  the  county  of  Yorkshire,  to  keepe  the  Court  at  Doner  and  y''  next  County 
Court  at  Yorke  at  the  ajipointed  tjme,  and  the  gent°  aboue  expressed,  w""  the 
sajd  associates,  haue  heereby  graunted  them  the  same  coiiiission  in  all  respects 
as  formerly  by  this  Court  was  graunted  to  M""  Symon  Bradstreet  and  M"'  Sam- 
uel! Symons,  &t',  in  referenc  to  Kittery,  Yorke,  &G,  and  they  are  heereby 
impouered  to  act  accordingly  as  they  shall  judg  meete  in  sending  warrants  to 
all  persons  not  yet  subjected  to  this  gouernment  that  are  inhabiting  w*in  the 
northerly  Ijne  of  our  patent,  so  farr  as  it  is  extended,  and  to  take  them  vnder 
this  goQment,  making  theire  retourne  to  y'  next  Genu"  Court. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  M'  Joseph  Hills,  M''  Edmond  Batter, 
Cap?  Thomas  Clarke,  &  M'  Edward  Colljns,  or  any  thi-ee  of  them,  be  a 
coiiiittee  to  treate  and  agree  w*  any  merchant  or  merchants  for  supplying  the 
countrje  w"'  salt,  according  to  the  propposicons  mencbned  in  a  draught  of  an 
order,  &6,  to  the  like  effect  for  the  bennefitt  of  the  countrje ;  and  to  the  end 
It  may  be  the  better  effected,  and  all  occasions  of  objecc6n  prevented,  the 
proclamacon  ensuing  shallbe  posted  vp  on  the  meeting  howse  doores  in  Bos- 
ton, &  other  publicq.  places  :  — 


Proclamation 
ab'  salt,  &c. 


The  Gennerall  Court  for  the  Massachusetts  being  sencible  of  the  exigents 
of  the  countrje  in  respect  of  salt,  haue  appointed  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  of 
Boston,  and  others,  a  comittee  to  treate  w""  any  merchant,  or  other,  that  are 
willing  to  engage,  to  supply  the  countrje  w""  salt,  yv"^  coiiiittee  are  ordered  to 
attend  the  same  vppon  the  9*  day  of  this  instant  mon"^,  at  the  Shipp  Tauerne, 
at  tenn  of  the  clock.     By  the  Court. 

EDW:  RAWSON,  Secrely. 


THE    MASSxYCIIUSBTTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  225 


23  May. 

[*197.] 

Committee  ab' 


*M'  SjTMon  Braclstreete,  Cap?  Humphrey  Atherton,  M'  Richard  Russell, 
Capt  Eliazer  Lusher,  and  M'  Edward  Colljns  are  appointed  a  comittee  to  con- 
sider of  the  case  of  the  churclies  of  Ipswich  &  Boston,  w""  referenc  to  M"" 
Norton,  making  theii'e  retourne  to  y'  Court,  yv"^  they  did  as  followeth,  w'^''  the 

Court  apprOOVed  of: M' Norton,  &6 

Forasmuch  as  it  is  apparent  that  the  breach  &  discord  in  Ipswich  church  Thcire  re- 
is  very  great,  &  such  as  they  are  not  able  to  compose  themselves  w""  peace  & 
mutuall  sattisfaction,  nor  haue  they  sought  advice  or  councill  from  other  churches 
to  helpe  issue  the  same,  but  (as  we  are  credibly  informed)  grievance  &  offences 
are  dayly  increased,  insomuch  as  it  threatnes  the  dissolution  of  the  sajd  church, 
if  some  tjmely  meanes  bee  not  vsed  for  the  prevention  thereof,  wee  cann  thinke 
of  no  better  expedient,  agreeable  to  the  rule  of  Christ,  to  propose,  then  that 
there  be  forthwith  a  councill  called  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Court,  consisting 
of  the  messengers  of  twelve  churches,  viz.,  Roxbury,  Dorchester,  Braintrje, 
Dedham,  Charlestoune,  Cambridge,  Watertoune,  Sudbury,  Salem,  Lynn,  Row- 
ley, and  Newbury ;  each  church  to  send  two  messengers  to  meete  at  Ipswich 
the  first  third  day  of  the  next  month,  &  having  informed  themselves  of  all 
proceedings  and  transactions  of  the  churches  of  Ipswich  &  Boston  in  reffer- 
ence  to  M''  Nortons  setling  at  Boston,  in  way  of  office,  or  so  much  thereof  as 
they  shall  judge  necessary  to  begett  a  right  vnderstanding  of  the  whole  case 
or  cawse  of  obstruccon,  (they  may  if  they  please,)  first  endeavor  by  argu- 
ments and  Christian  advice  to  perswade  each  chixrch  &  party  concerned  there- 
in to  doe  theire  duty,  or  otherwise,  according  to  the  order  and  power  of  a 
councill  to  declare  the  minde  of  Christ,  what  is  fui-ther  to  be  done  by  the 
churches  of  Ipswich  and  Boston,  or  M''  Norton,  in  reference  to  his  setling  at 
Boston,  or  retourning  to  his  charge  at  Ipswich,  that  so,  if  it  be  the  will  of  God, 
peace  and  vnitje  may  be  renewed  &  continued  in  the  churches. 

Whereas  the  church  of  Boston,  aboue  two  yeares  since,  mooved  the  church 
of  Ipswich  to  giue  vp  theire  reuerend  teacher,  M"'  Norton,  to  the  seruice  of 
Christ  in  the  church  of  Boston,  w'^'^  the  church  of  Ipswich  not  assenting 
vnto,  the  case  was,  by  the  mutual  consent  of  the  two  chinches,  committed  to  a 
councill,  which  mett  and  gaue  m  theire  advice  and  determination  to  the  church 
of  Ipswich  in  February,  1652,  wherevppon  the  church  of  Ipswich,  in  answer 
to  the  motjon  of  the  church  of  Boston,  passed  theire  vote  of  February  31, 
which  by  the  church  of  Boston  is  vnderstood  to  be  a  consent  to  theire  mo- 
con,  whereby  they  were  free  to  addresse  themselves  to  M''  Norton,  to  invite 
him  to  accept  of  a  call  to  ofiice,  and  he  at  libertje  to  accept  thereof;  but  vn- 
derstanding the  church  of  Ipswich  gaue  another  sence  of  theiie  vote,  they  sent 

VOL.   IV. PART  I.  29 


226  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


23  May. 


16  55.  messengers  in  Nonember  ffoUowing  to  tte  cliurcli  of  Ipswich  to  expostulate  the 
meaning  of  the  sajd  vote,  at  which  meeting  the  chuixh  of  Ipswich  denjed  they 
had  in  the  sajd  vote,  or  any  act  preceding  the  sajd  vote,  consented  that  M"" 
Norton  might  accept  of  office  in  Boston  chiu'ch ;  wherevppon  the  chmch  of 
Order  for  a  Boston  desired  the  help  of  a  councill,  and  gaue  notice  thereof  to  the  cliurch 
Ipswicb.  '  °^  Ipswich  to  send  theire  messengers  to  decide  the  qutestion,  who,  meeting  at 
Boston  in  Nouember,  53,  gaue  theire  advice  and  judgment,  as  may  appeare  by 
the  acts  of  the  councill,  to  which  the  church  of  Ipswich  haue,  notw^standing 
seuerall  endeavo",  not  signified  theire  assent  or  dissent,  being  sequally  divided 
vppon  the  question,  as  wee  are  credibly  informed ;  by  occasion  of  all  which 
proceedings,  wee  cannot  but  w"'  sorrow  of  harte  take  notice  of  the  great  and 
vncomfortable  distraccons  in  the  church  of  Ipswich,  the  differences  yett  re- 
mayning  betweene  the  two  churches  in  reference  to  M'  Nortons  sethng  at  Bos- 
ton in  way  of  office,  which  threatens  the  dissolution  of  the  church  of  Ips- 
wich, together  w*  the  disappointment  of  the  church  of  Boston  and  the  coun- 
tije  by  loosing  M'  Norton,  while  the  two  churches  are  contending  for  him  ; 
the  issue  of  all  which  would  be  of  sad,  if  not  destructive  consequence  to  the 
peace  and  welfare  of  the  churches,  which  wee  acknowledge  oiu'  duty  by  all 
lawfidl  nieanes  to  endeavor  to  prevent,  and  having  seriously  considered  there- 
of, wee  cann  thinke  of  no  better  expedient  agreeable  to  the  minde  of  Christ 
then  to  call  a  councill  of  the  elders  and  messengers  of  churches  to  helpe  in  a 
case  of  such  difficultje  and  daunger.  Itt  is  therefore  ordered  and  desired, 
that  the  churches  at  Eoxbury,  Dorchester,  Braintrje,  Dedliam,  Charlestoune, 
Cambridge,  Watertoune,  Sudbury,  Salem,  Lynn,  Newburry,  and  Kowley  doe 
each  of  them  respectively  send  two  messengers,  to  meete  at  Ipswich  on  the 
second  Tuesday  in  June,  to  consider  and  advise  in  the  p>mises,  viz.,  to  en- 
deavor to  compose  and  setle  the  distractions  at  Ipswich,  to  give  theire  judg- 
ment vpon  the  case  in  difflsrence  betweene  the  two  churches,  whereby  M'' 
Nortons  way  may  be  cleered,  and  the  obstruccons  which  haue  or  may  hinder 
a  comfortable  issue  of  this  long  difference  may  be  remooved,  and  the  peace 
and  quiet  of  the  churches  maybe  procured  and  setled ;  and  to  prevent  delajes, 
itt  is  expected  and  desired,  that  the  church  of  Ipswich  and  the  chm-ch  of  Bos- 
ton, by  theire  messengers,  &  all  persons  concerned,  give  this  councill,  at  the 
tjme  and  place  aforesajd,  the  opportunitje  of  meeting  w"^  them,  to  declare 
what  shall  concerne  themselves,  or  the  councill  see  cawse  to  inquire  of  their 
in  reference  to  this  buisines ;  and  wee  haue  desired  the  honnored  GoQno'',  M' 
Bradstreet,  M'  Russell,  &  Cap?  Edward  Johnson  to  be  present  at  the  sajd 
meeting,  to  prevent  any  inconvenience,  &  more  particularly  to  impart  our 
desires  &  intencons  if  neede  require;  and  itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Robt  Pajne 
shall  take  care  for  the  entertajnement  of   the    sajd   councill,  and  all    psons 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  227 

concerned  therein,  w*''  shall  be  sattisfied  by  the  Tresm-er.     And  itt  is  fuither      1655. 
ordered,  the  said  counciU  haue  libertje  to  adjom-ne  to  some  other  place  if  they  ^        ' 

.        ''  23  May. 

shall  see  cawse.  By  the  Court. 

ED:    RAWSON,  Secre!. 


*In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Nonotucke,  humbly  desiring      [*198.J 

Ans^  to  None 
tucke  peticon. 


the  establishment  of  goQment  amongst  them,  theire  peticon  is  graunted,  and  ^^^''  *°  ^°^° 


itt  is  ordered,  that  Willjam  Houlton,  Thomas  Bascome,  &  Edward  Elmer 
shall  &  hereby  are  impowrcd  as  the  threemen  to  end  all  smale  causes,  ac- 
cording to  lawe  here,  they  repajTring  to  Springfeild,  to  M'^  Piuchon,  M' 
Holiock,  &5,  who  are  authorized  to  give  them  theire  oathes,  as  also  the 
connstables  oath  to  Eobert  Bartlett. 

lu  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  Jn°  Alcocke,  the  Court,  being  sattisfied  in  the  Ans'  to  M'  Jn- 
conveyance  of  M''  Norris  for  fewer  hundred  acres  of  land,  and  of  the  graunt  peticon. 
of  24:3  acres  of  the  foiu-  thousand  acres  graunted  to  Roxbury,  and  of  M"'  Pals- 
graues  dispose  of  the  200  acres  of  land  to  his  -nife,  and  of  the  peticoners  right 
therevnto  by  a  letter  of  attorney  vnder  the  hand  and  sealc  of  M"  Anna  Pals- 
grauc,  doe  order  and  graimt,  that  eight  hundred  forty  and  two  acres  of  land 
be  lajd  out  vnto  the  peticbner,  as  is  desired,  by  Eusigne  Jn"  Sherman  ;  pro- 
vided, that  no  just  clajme  of  any  other  children  of  the  ffather  of  the  peticSners 
(if  any  be)  be  thereby  impajred  vnto  the  two  parcels  of  400  &  242  acres  of 
land  in  this  peticon  expressed. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Cap?  Leuerets  case,  refen-ed  by  the  councill  to  this     29 : 3 :  55. 
Court,  shall  be  heard  on  the  morrow,  att  one  of  the  clocke. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  these  five  cases,  i.  e.,  Elias  Parkman  ag'  Cap?  Dau 
Gookin,  Elias  Parkman  ag'  Capt  Eotjt  Fcnn,  Mounequasson  ag'  Hugh  Bat- 
ten, Capt  Robt  Keajne,  &5,  ag'  W""  Planton,  and  Capt  Keajne,  &d,  ag'  M' 
Robt  Knight,  coming,  of  course,  to  be  heard  and  determined  by  this  Court, 
shall  be  called  &  heard  one  after  another,  on  the  3'*  day  next  at  nine  of  the 
clocke  in  the  morning. 

In  the  case  depending  betweene  Elias  Paikman,  plaintiffe,  &  Capt  Dann 
Gookin,  defendant,  in  reference  to  the  sajd  Parkmans  vojage  to  Virginea,  the 
Court,  on  the  hearing  of  the  case  and  all  partjes  concerned  therein,  doe  judge, 
that  although  there  were  five  persons,  old  &  young,  shipt  aboard  the  sajd 
Parkman  by  the  defendent,  yett,  in  regard  two  of  them'  were  very  young,  he 
shall  be  allowed  for  transporting  thi-ee  persons  and  a  halfe  only  the  soiiie  of  Judgm'  of 

.     _  1  -IT  Court  in  Elias 

seven  pounds,  and  for  a  parcell  of  goods  which  he  carrjed  twenty  shiUmgs  ;  paj-kmans 
of  w'^''  fewer  pounds  tenn  shillings  is  found  pajd  in  a  parcell  of  tobacco ;  but  '*^^- 
nothing  due  to  the  plain?  for  the  fower  thousand  of  bread  w'=''  was  shipt  on 


228  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

165  5.     another  vessell ;  so  that  the  Couit  finds  for  the  plaintiff  three  pounds  tenn 
'       ^1        '    shillings  damages,  and  two  pounds  five  shillings  and  eight  pence  costs. 

29  May.  .    • 

_",..'  In   the    case    betwecne    Capt    E«t)t   Keaine    and    M"'  Josiah  Winslow, 

Capt.  Kcajne  ^ 

&  M'  vvinsiow  plaintiffs  and  attovu-ney  for  the  vndertakers  of  the  iion  works,  and  INI'  Hdht 

in  M' Knights  .  ,    .      .™  •      i      -nr 

case  nou-         Kuight,  defendant,  the   Comt    doe  judge  the  plaintiffs   are  nonsuited,   M"' 
Bxa  e  .  Winslow  not  appearing,  nor  any  for  him,  according  to  law,  and  Capt  Keajne 

refusing  to  give  securitje,  according  to  lawe,  to  be  responsall  in  case  the  de- 
fendant should  recouer  against  him,  but  declared  that  he  would  rather  yeild 
vp  his  coinission  then  so  doe. 
Parkmans  case  The  Court,  w"'  consent  of  parties,  respitted  the  hearing  &  determination 

ag«  Cap'  Fenn    ^^    »  g^gg  betweenc  Elias  Parkman  &  Capt  Fenn  to  the  next  sessions  of  this 

respitteu,  &c.  *'  ^ 

Court  in  October  next. 
Monnequas-  111  the  Case  of  Monnequassom  &  Hugh  Batten,  the  partjes,  bj^  consent, 

w™4rIwnT        w"'<ii"ew  for  present,  in  hope  to  agree. 

Courts  judg-  In  the  case  of  Capt  Keajne  and  M"'  Josiah  Winslow,  plaintiffs,  and  M' 

^^^  T    '  'r  Jn°  Gilford,  defendant,  for  breach  of  couenants,  referred  to   this  Court,  the 

Giffords  case  of  '  '  '  ' 

breach  of  plaintiffs  not  appearing,  the  Court  declares  the  plaintiffs  to  be  nonsuited. 

couenant. 

r*1QQl  *^^  ^^^^  ^°  ^^^  peticon  of  Thomas  Wisewall  &  Jn°  Jackson,  inhabitants 

Tho.  Wisewall  °^  Cambiidg,  &d;  itt  is  ordered,  that  M"^  Nowell,  M""  Richard  Russell,  Capt 
&jn»Jacksons  j^jj^^id  Johnson,  and  Capt  Ehazar  Lusher  be  a  comittee  to  heare  what  the 

peticon,  &c,  for 

avillag.  peticbners,  as    also   the    chiurch   of  Cambridg,  shall  alledge,  either  for  the 

graunting  or  waving  theire  propposicons,  and  to  make  retourne  to  the  next 
sessions  of  this  Court  of  theire  apihencons  therein,  vnlesse  the  church  of  Cam- 
bridg and  the  peticoners  come  to  some  setlement  in  the  meane  tjme,  to  whom 
the  peticoners  should  first  apply  themselues  for  releife. 
Ans'toM'  111  ^iis"'  to  the  peticon  of  M''  Symon  Eires,  Jn°  Stone,  Jn°  Whitney,  W" 

Eires,  &c,         Page,  &6,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  referre  the  peticoners  to  the  retourne 
Courts  confir-    of  the  cdEissioners  appointed  to  setle  the  matters  in  differenc  betweene  them 

macon  ofy»  i  •     r^  -i     ^  no-  i  i 

acts  of  Major    whose  acts  this  Court  doth  approove  oi,  &  contjnew,  as  tliey  are  presented  to 
Wiiiard  M^      this  Court,  and  ai-e  on  file. 

Danforth,  &  ' 

Ensigne  sher-  Jq  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  M"^  Edniond  Broune,  Peter  Nojes,  Sen,  Walter 

man. 

A   't  M'        Haine,  &  difi  others,  inhabitants  of  Sudbury,  &<3,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Major 
Broune,  Svmon  WiUard,  Ensigne  Jn°  Sherman,  and  M'  Thomas  Danforth  are  &  shallbe 

Walter  Haine,      ''  __  ° 

&c,  peticon,  in  appointed  a  comittee  w"'  full  power  and  authoritje  to  heare  and  determine  all 
g  ,,  the  differences  betweene  all  or  any  of  the  inhabitants  of  Sudbury  in  reference 

to  what  is  mencbned  in  the  peticon,  w"^*"  is  on  file. 
Ans'  to  Bob'       "       ^^  ^^^'^  ^o  the  peticon  of  Robt  Lord  for  a  revejw  of  his  case  ag'  Nathaniell 
Lords  peticon.  Boulter,  the  Court  graunts  his  request,  &  ordered  notice  to  be  giuen  to  the 

sajd  Boulter,  w'^''  by  warrant  was  donn  accordingly. 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  229 

In  the  case  of  Eofet  Lord,  plaintiffe,  and  Nathanlell  Boulter,  defend',  on      1  G  5  5. 
the  hearing  of  the  cawse,  the  Court  finds  for  the  plaintiffe.  "       ''       ' 

29  May. 

Whereas  a  majo'^  for  the  county  of  Suffolk  is  wanting,  itt  is  therefore  q^^^^jj,  ■^^^„^, 
ordered,  that  the  secretary  shall  forthwith  issue  out  warrants  to  each  cap?  in  i^  Kob'  Lords 

case. 

the  seuerall  tounes  of  the  county  of  Suffolke,  and  require  them  to  send  in  order  for 
theire  voates,  according  to  lawe,  for  the  choosing  of  a  new  maior,  the  votes  to  '^^°i'"^  °^  * 

'  "  °  ■'  new  major. 

be  sent  in  to  Boston,  sealed  vp,  on  the  13"'  of  June  next,  to  be  opened  as  the 
lawe  requires.     This  was  donne  accordingly. 

Whereas   M'^  W"  Worcester,   M''  Jn"  Brocke,  and  M""  Vallentjne   Hill  CoiBissioners 
were  chosen  coinission"  by  this  Coiu-t  and  invested  w"'  full  power  to  heare  ^,  ^^^^^  ^f 
and  determine  all  matters  in  difference  betweene  the  toune  of  Yorke  and  M""  '''"^''®- 
Godfry  in  relation  to  the  graunts  of  certaine  lands,  which  accordingly  they 
haue  endeavored   to  doe,  and  made  theire  retourne   to  this  Court,  against 
which  the  inhabitants  of  Yorke  haue  made  some  objections  respecting  the  con- 
firmation of  vnknoune  graunts  made  by  the  sajd  M''  Godfry  before  the  date 
of  theire  retourne,  as  also  the  graunts  of  lands  f?judicijall  to  the  toune,  which 
this  Court  having  considered  of  doe  judge  meete  to  re  invest  the  aforesajd 
coiiiissioners  w""  full  power,  and  doe  heereby  desire  them,  w"*  all  conveniente 
speede,  to  make  revejw  of  theire  retourne,  and,  if  it  may  be,  by  consent  of  all 
persons  engaged,  to  compose  the  same  to  mutuall  sattisfaction ;  or,  if  other- 
wise, to  make  vse  of  such  theire  power  to  correct  or  amend  what,  in  theire 
vnderstanding  vppon  further  information,  shall  appeare  to  be  of  evill  con- 
sequence to  the  toune  or  any  person  concerned  therein. 

*The  Court,  having  heard  charge  against  Cap?  Leueret,  and  his  ans'      [*200.] 
therevnto,  in  reference  to  the  Dutch  shipp  called  the  Prophett  Samuell,  of  Capt.Leuerctts 

censure. 

Amsterdam,  and  vppon  a  serious  consideracbn  thereof,  doe  judge,  that  such 
actings  (w^out  the  consent  or  allowance  of  authoritje  heere  established)  is  a 
confronting  of  this  goQment,  and  tends  highly  to  the  infringing  of  our  liber- 
tjes,  discouraging  of  trade,  and  destructive  to  our  comfortable  being  heere,  if 
permitted  or  connived  at,  and  therefore  cannot  but  approove  of  the  proceed- 
ings of  the  councill  in  this  case,  and  theire  just  and  due  care  to  vjihold  the 
authoritje  of  tliis  coiiionwealth,  w"'  the  libertjes  and  priviledges  thereof;  but 
forasmuch  as  the  sajd  Capt  Leueret  doth  solemnly  prottest  his  fidellitje  to  this 
goQnment,  and  the  due  honnor  that  he  beares  therevnto,  and  that  had  he  fore- 
seene  his  actings  and  proceedings  would  haue  binn  offencive  he  would  wholly 
haue  forborne  the  same,  —  vppon  these  and  the  like  consideracSns,  the  Court  is 
not  wilHng  to  heighten  his  censure  proporccSnable  to  the  demerit  of  his  offence, 
but  shall  only  adjudg  a  graue  and  serious  admonition  to  be  given  him  by  the 
Gofino"^  in  the  name  of  this  Comt,  hoping  that  this  our  lenitje  will  be  so  im- 
prsoved  by  him  as  may  deserve  the  further  favor  of  this  Court. 


29  May. 
Comissioners 


230  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1655.  The  admouitioii  was  given  accordingly,  the  whole  Court  being  together. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  W"  Torrey  and  Capt  Richard  Brachett  are  ap- 
pointed by  this  Court  to  appointe  both  tjme  and  place  for  the  meeting  w"* 
to  lay  oiit  the    such  coiiiissioners  as  shall  be  chosen  by  the  Gennerall  Court  of  New  Pljm- 

marish  at  i  ■  i      n    ■  /->  i 

Connahassett.  outh,  and  joyne  w'°  them  to  lay  out  that  niarish  lying  at  Lonnahassett, 
belonging  to  this  jurisdiccSn,  according  to  the  former  agreement  betweene  the 
coiiiissioners  of  this  jurisdiccon  and  New  Pljmouth,  as  thereby  may  appeare, 
making  theire  retourne  to  the  next  Com-t. 

Ans'  to  Jn«  In  aus"^  to  the  peticon  of  John  Ridgeway,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M"^  Jor- 

potiCon.'  daine  haue  liberty  to  try  his  acoon  for  that  particular  case  exj)ressed  in  the 

answer  to  his  peticSn  the  last  Gennerall  Court,  provided  he  proceed  to  trjall 
at  the  next  County  Court  for  that  countje  ;  otherwise  Jn"  Ridgeway  to  haue 
libertje  to  proceede  with  his  accon  in  ]\Iiddlesex  Coiut  or  elswhere,  ac- 
cording to  lawe  ;  and  the  Court  doth  further  judg,  that  no  advantage  shall 
be  taken  against  the  peticoner  in  reference  to  what  hath  past  already  at 
Cambridge  Court  in  this  case. 

Ans'  to  Jn»  In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  Jn°  Blood,  humbly  desir-ing  this  Courts  con- 

00  spe  con.  g^-j^^fj^j^  ^f  ^  farme  of  fewer  hundred  acres,  w'"''  was  lajd  out  by  order  of  this 

Court  to  M''  Sam  Haugh,  nere  Concord,  of  whom  he  purchast  it,  though  it 

be  not  rightly  bounded,  that  so  further  troubles  maybe  prevented,  the  Court 

graunts  his  request. 

Ans'  to  Lynns  In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Lynne  in  reference  to  the 

first  pte  thereof,  the  Court  declares,  that  an  order  is  made  this  Court  that 
provides  that  countjes  build  and  maintajne  theire  oune  bridges,  to  which  they 
are  referred  to  the  latter  part.  Itt  is  ordered,  that  not  only  the  petitioners, 
but  also  all  the  tounes  in  this  juiisdiccou,  shall  haue  liberty  to  prevent  the 
coming  in  of  such  as -come  from  other  parts  or  places  of  these  jurisdiccons ; 
and  doe  therefore  further  order,  that  all  such  persons  as  shall  be  brought  in 
to  any  such  toune  w^out  the  consent  and  allowance  of  the  prudentiall  men 
shall  not  be  chargeable  to  the  tounes  where  they  dwell,  but,  if  necessitje  re- 
quire, shallbe  rcleived  and  majntajned  by  those  y'  were  the  cawse  of  tT^eire 
coming  in,  of  whom  the  toune  or  selectmen  are  hereby  impowred  to  require 
securitje  at  theire  entrance,  or  els  forbid  theire  entertajnment. 
r*201 1  *Considering  the  vrgent  occasion  of  the  countrje  in  gennerall  respecting 

Ord'  ab'  Lynne  the   bridge  in  the  countrje  highway  at  Lynn,   and  that  the  Countje  Court 

^'^^se-  is    jiot  till  the   end  of   this    month,   itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Edmond    Bat- 

ter, of  Salem,  M'  George  Giddings,  of  Ipswich,  iP  Joseph  Jewett,  of 
Rowley,  M"^  Thomas  Layton,  of  Lynn,  or  the  major  part  of  them,  shall 
be  a  coinlttee  forthw"*  to  consider  and  carry  on  the  compleating  of  the  sajd 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  231 

bridge,  and  the  next  County  Court  shall  proportion  the  charge  to  the  tounes 
in  that  countje,  according  to  the  lawe  made  tliis  sessions. 

This  Court,  considering  that  bridges  in  countrje  highways  are  for  the  „  , 
benneffitt  of  the  countrje  in  gennerall,  and  that  it  maybe  very  vnequall  to  lay  y°  charg  of  all 

r  1  •  •         1  '       '       ^  r  t      i         bridges  in 

the  charge  for  such  services  on  particcular  tounes,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that  each  county. 
from  tjme  to  tjme,  vppon  informacon  or  complainte  to  each  County  Coiut  of 
any  necessitje  or  neglect  in  such  cases,  the  Court  shall  appoint  a  coinittee  to 
vejw,  consider,  and  determine  the  same,  and  that  the  charges  shall  be  ap- 
proporcfined  by  the  magistrates  in  each  Countje  Court,  to  be  levjed  vppon  the 
seuerall  tounes  in  each  countje,  according  to  the  directions  of  the  lawe,  for 
countrje  rates  vppon  the  estate  in  each  countje ;  &  the  lawe  made  in  the  8  m°, 
1648,  that  layeth  the  charg  of  bridges  on  particular  tounes,  is  heereby  repealed. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Braintrje,  the  Court,  hauing  Cosuttee  for 
ordered  that  all  bridges  in  countrje  high  wajes,  as  neede  shallbe,  shall  from  ,  ^P°"^® 
tjme  to  tjme  be  made  and  maintajned  by  each  countje  in  which  they  are  ;  and 
that  the  bridge  at  Naponsett  Riuer  is  wholly  ruined,  and  that  there  is,  as  is 
alleadged,  necessitje  of  a  cart  bridge  ouer  that  riuer  in  some  place  neere  Cap? 
Stoughtons  mill,  which,  if  deferred,  cannot  be  made  vp  before  the  winter,  itt 
is  therefore  ordered,  that  Cap?  Thomas  Savage,  EUiazer  Lusher,  M"^  CoUicott, 
M'  W™  Parks,  Thomas  Dyer,  and  Deacon  Basse,  or  the  majo""  part  of  them, 
shallbe  a  comittee  to  consider  and  determine  whither  to  errect  a  bridge  there, 
and  if  so,  then  to  agree  w"'  worke  men  for  the  same,  and  to  retourne  the  same 
to  the  next  County  Court,  who  shall  approporcon  the  charge  according  to 
lawe. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  Salisbury,  itt  is  ordered,  Ans'  to  Tho. 
that  the  bridge  George  Carr  is  building  &  providing  for  one  part  of  Sallisbury  petiCon  m 
Riuer,  being  in  such  forwardnes,  should  contiiiew,  and  mavbe  improoved  for  '^'^'''"'^'"'^ '°  ^^•' 

'  J  1  Cans  bridge. 

publlcke  good,  and  the  next  County  Court  at  Hampton  is  heereby  impowered 
to  order  the  same,  so  that  the  trans^iortacon  of  the  peticouers  hay  be  obstructed 
as  litle  as  maybe,  and  that  the  sajd  bridge  be  lett  fly  for  the  month  of  Septem- 
ber, that  so  the  peticbners  may  haue  due  tjme  to  transport  theire  hay  w*''out  any 
lett  or  hinderance  during  that  tjme ;  and  the  sajd  George  Carre  is  to  keepe  a 
Bufficijent  ferry  boate  on  that  side. 

In  ans''  to  M'  Houchins  request  for  liberty  to  lay  doune  his  ensigns  place,  Ans'  to  M' 
the  Court  graunted  his  request.  peticSon^ 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Jeremiah  Houchin,  itt  is  ordered,  that  an  inventory  Ab>  Grosse  his 
of  the  estate  of  Edmond  Groce,  deceased,  being  truly  brought  in  to  the  next 
County  Court  for  SuSblke,  the  estate  shallbe  thus  divided  :  i.  e..  The  -n-iddow 
shall  haue  one  third  part  of  the  whole  estate ;   the  eldest  sonne  a  double 


232  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1655.      porcon,  and  the  rest  to  be  divided  betweene  the  rest  of  the  children,  part  and 
'        '    part  like. 

29  May. 

Norfolk  Courts  "'■''''  ^^  Ordered,  that  M"'  Samuell  Synionds  and  Capt  Thomas  Wiggins  shall 

to  be  kept  by    l^gepe  the  Coiintv  Courts  in  Norfolke  for  the  yeare  ensuing. 

M'  Symonds  &  ^  "^  _  .  . 

Cap'  Wiggins.  *In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Deane  Winthrop,  in  behalfe  of  Samuell  Win 

[*202.]      throp,  his  brother,  itt  is  ordered,  the  peticbner  be  sattisfied  by  the  Tresurer 
Ans'  to  Sam.     in  such  pay  as  the  countrje  affords,  the  third  part  of  the  two  hundred  pounds 

"Winthiops 

peticon.  due  to  the  sajd  Samuell  Winthrop,  provided  he  haue  and  shew  forth  a  suf- 

ficijent  power,  by  letter  of  attourney  or  otherwise,  to  receive  and  give  discharge 
for  the  same. 
Ans-  to  Edw.  In  ans''  to  the   peticon  of  Edward  Kibby,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  house 

ab' Garret         ^^^  lands  of  Garrett  Bournes,  now  vnder  seizure  by  the  countrje,  shallbe  dis- 
Boumes  child,  posed  of  for  his  childs  vse  by  the  selectmen  of  the  toune  of  Boston,  provided 
theire  power  extends  not  to  make  sale  of  the  same,  but  the  propriety  to  re- 
majne  to  the  child. 
Ans'  to  Grace  In  ans''  to  the  petic8n  of  Grace  Porter,  craving  the  favor  of  this  Court  for 

peticon.  liberty  to  sell  the  house  &  lands  she  stands  possessed  of,  menconed  in  liir  pe- 

ticon, the  Court  graimts  hir  request,  so   as  Daniell  Smith,  of  Water  Toune, 
husband  of  the  daughter  of  Tho  Rodgers,  haue  notice  given  him  by  Jn°  Sher- 
man of  the  Court  condiscencon,  vnlesse  the  sajd  Smith,  at  the  next  sessions 
of  this  Court,  shall  shew  cause  to  the  contrary. 
Ans'  to  Edw.  In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  Edward  Brecke  for  the  remittment  of  a  fine  of 

^ jec  s  p   I      fQ^^yrgj.  pounds,  imposed  on  him  for  refusing  the  counstables  office,  the  Coiut 

sees  no  cawse  to  graunt  his  request. 
Ans'  to  seOil  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  Scotshmen,  no  proofe  nor  probabilitje 

cote  mens      appearing  of  what  the  peticbuers  affii-me,  the  Court  sees  no  cause  to  graunt 
theire  request. 
Ans'  to  Henry  In  ans''  to  the  peticbn  of  Henry  Woolcott,  of  Winsor,  on  Conecticott,  itt  is 

^-  ordered,  that  all  proceedings  about  the  thirtje  pounds  seven  shillings  menconed 

in  the  peticbn  be  suspended,  and  that  itt  remajne  in  statu  quo  prius  as  before 
the  execution  levyed,  vntill  the  peticbner  may  haue  opportunitje  either 
joynctly  w*  Nicholas  White,  or  in  the  name  and  right  of  the  sajd  White, 
though  his  consent  should  be  wanting,  that  the  peticbner,  either  by  himself 
or  his  attorney,  may  haue  opportunitje  to  revejw  or  try  an  accon  as  aforesajd, 
for  the  cleering  of  the  title  of  the  land  sold  by  the  peticbner  vnto  the  sajd 
White,  in  the  County  Court  to  be  held  at  Boston  in  the  S""  or  8'-^  m°  next. 
And  if  the  land  shall  be  recouered  of  M"'  Hutchinson  for  the  sajd  White, 
then  the  bills  for  the  thirty  pounds  seuen  shillings  to  be  null,  w'^'out  more  im- 
pleading of  White ;  and  also  that  the  magistrates  then  shall  determine  all 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  233 

damages  respecting  M"'  Woolcot  &  Nicholas  White,  in  reference  to  all  former      1  G  5  5. 
proceedings  by  theire  impleading  each  of  other.  '     "^ 

29  May. 

Whereas  wee,  whose  names  are  herevnder  written,  being  authorized  by  the  Coniissioners 

to  tn,lc6  jicco^ 

honnored  Gennerall  Court,  held  at  Boston,  October,  1654,  to  deale  in  matters  of  Yorks 
of  diiference  amongst  vs  in  Yorkshire,  about  country  charges,  wee  not  being  estates,  &a. 
able  to  act  according  to  the  vttmost  extent  of  our  order,  for  want  of  light,  but 
according  to  our  best  abilitjes  wee  haue  effected  so  much  as  is  sattisfactory  to 
both  partjes  herein,  notw"'standing  the  person  appointed  for  Kittery  in  this 
buisnes  refused  to  apply  himself  to  the  honnored  Courts  order,  and  hath  not 
brought  in  the  valuation  of  theire  estates,  yett  wee  haue  fairely  &  favorably 
acted  for  them  as  for  ourselves,  indifferently,  as  may  appeare  by  these  seuerall 
somes  that  follow,  as  wee  are  credibly  informed  to  walke ;  &  in  valluation  wee 
finde  these  pticculars  to  be  that  charge  which  necessarily  ariseth  aequally  propor- 
tioned from  the  countjes  estate  on  Kittery,  w"*  y*  part  of  He  of  Shoales  belong- 
ing to  it 45      15      00 

ToYorke, 17      17      00 

Wells, 13      10      00 

Cape  Porpus, 04      08      00 

Saco, 10      05      00 


91      15      00 


Subscribed, 


ABRAHAM   PREBLE, 
EOB^  BOOTH, 
JONATHAN   THING, 
GRIFFIN   MOUNTAGUE. 


The  Court  approoved  of  y°  retourne. 


*In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Christopher  Lindsey,  of  Lynn,  humbly  craving      [*203.1 
some  sattisfaccon  from  the  country  for  his  wound  in  the  Pecquod  service,  losse  Ans'  to  Chris' 
of  time,  &  charg  of  cure,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  peticoner  shall  be  pajd  three  petiCon. 
pounds,  in  sattisfaccon  of  his  months  pay  &  damages  sustejned  by  his  hurt. 

In  ans'  to  the  mocon  of  Joseph  Joncks,  Seil,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Joseph  Jcncks  engine 
Jencks,  Sen,  and  his  assignes  only  shall  haue  libertje  graunted  to  them  to 
make  that  engine  the  sajd  Jencks  hath  proposed  to  this  Comt,  for  the  more 
speedy  cutting  of  grasse,  for  seven  yeares,  and  that  no  inhabitant,  or  other  j)er- 
son  w"'iu  this  jurisdicc3n,  during  that  tjme  shall  make  or  vse  any  of  that  kind 
of  engine  w^'ont  license  first  obtajned  fi-om  the  sajd  Joseph  Jencks,  on  the 

VOL.  IV. FART   I.  30 


234'  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1655.      poenalty  of  five  pounds  for  euery  such  engine  so  made  or  vsed,  to  be  re- 
coured  at  any  Court  in  this  jiu'isdiccon  by  the  said  Joseph  Jencks,  Sen,  or 


29  May. 


his  assignes. 


Cap'  Leueretts  The  whole  Court  being  mett  together.  Cap?  Leuerett  was  sent  for  and 

&c  &  he  rectus  appeared,  who  publickely  professed  that  he  was  mistaken  in  producing  that  to 
in  Curja.  ]jg  ^  record  w*  was  not ;  &  y'  if  he  had  knoune  so  much  before  as  now,  he 

should  haue  binn  farr  from  making  vse  thereof,  or  producing  it,  &  w'^''  is  a 
farther  aggravacSn  that  he  should  produce  that  which  is  so  ofFencive,  and  ap- 
peares  to  be  no  reccord,  when  he  was  not  necessitated  in  that  cawse  to  produce 
it ;  w'^''  acknowledgment  the  Court  accepted  of,  and  declared,  that  whereas  Capt 
Jn°  Leueret,  for  his  late  acting  in  refference  to  the  Dutch  shipp,  was  by  this 
Court  censured,  &  suspended  the  exercise  of  liis  office  of  captaiue,  &d,  whereby 
the  libertjes  and  authoritje  of  this  gouernment  are  vindicated,  which  was  the 
intent  of  that  sentence,  not  the  losse  of  the  helpe  of  any  vsefull  person,  which 
wee  are  willing  to  improove ;  and  the  Court,  being  well  pswaded  that  the 
sajd  Capt  Leuerett  will  according  to  his  profession  and  duly  direct  his  actings 
for  the  future  to  the  advancement  of  the  welfare  and  authoritje  of  this  gouern- 
ment, haue  reversed  that  part  of  his  sentence  whereby  he  stands  suspended  the 
excercise  of  his  office,  &  doe  heereby  restore  him  to  his  place,  &  y'  he  is  rec- 
tus in  Curja  as  before. 
Ans'  to  Georg  In  ans''  to  the  petic8n  of  George  Munings,  humbly  craving  the  remitt- 

""'"^^  ment  of  two  fines  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court,  itt  is  ordered,  that 

the  five  pounds  fine  be  remitted  him,  &  the  other  be  abated  to  fewer  pounds, 
provided  it  be  forthwith  sattisfied,  and  that  this  Court  heare  no  more  of  it. 
Ans'  to  Ded-  In  ans''  to  the  peticbn  of  the  inhabitants  of  Dedham,  the  Court  refers  the 

peticoners  to  a  course  of  lawe  for  relcife  in  the  case  menconed  in  theire  peticSn. 
Ans'  to  Georg  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Georg  Parkhurst,  itt  is  ordered,  the  peticouer  be 

petiSon.  allowed  to  make  sale  of  the  land  therein  mcuConed,  j)rovided  that  two  tliird 

parts  of  the  price  be  left  in  the  hands  of  '^i'  Browne  for  the  vse  of  the  two 
eldest  sonns,  to  be  pajd  them  when  they  shall  come  to  twenty-one  yeares  com- 
pleat,  and  in  the  meane  tjme  to  be  improoved  for  theire  benefitt. 
Ans'towid'.  In  ans"'   to    the    peticSn  of  M"^^    EUino''   Hooke,   late  wife    to    M'  W" 

Hookspeiicon.  jjQQjj,g^  deceased,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  impower  hir,  the  peticoner, 
to  make  improovement  of  the  estate,  &  lands,  and  produce  thereof,  of  hir 
late  husbands,  M'  W™  Hooke,  and  to  demand,  receive,  and  recouer  all  debts, 
rents,  revennews,  and  proffitts  thereof,  for  the  discharge  of  just  debts,  and 
accoiiiodacon  of  hirself  and  youngest  Sonne  mencSned  in  the  peticon,  but 
not  to  make  sale  of  any  lands  till  this  Court  take  further  order  therein. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticttu  of  M"^^  Ellinor  Hooke,  craving  that  shee  might  be 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  235 

impowred  to  make  sale  of  such  lands  at  Accomenticus,  now  Yoikc,  that  hath      1655. 

binn  formerly  appi-opriated  to  Capl  Norton,  heretofore  hir  husband,  &  lajd  out    "" — ^ ' 

to  him,  and  recorded  in  the  booke  of  reccords  there,  the  Court  doth  graunt  the  *''" 

petieoner  power  to  make  sale  of  all  such  lands  to  and  for  hir  oune  vse  as  shall 
clearely  appeare  sometime  to  be  the  estate  of  Capt  Norton,  as  is  desired  in  hir 
peticbn,  provided  there  be  no  legall  convejance  of  the  land  heeretofore  made. 

*Ia  ans''  to  the  peticbn  of  Edward  Saunders,  craving  the  favor  of  this      [*204.1 
Court  for  the  leaving  of  from  his  necke  his  sentencd  halter,  the  Court,  having  Ans'to  Edward 
receaved  some  testimony  of  some  good  effect  his  other  punishment  hath  pro-  petiCon" 
duced,  doe  graunt  his  request. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Richard  Pooly,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  peticbner  Ans'  to  Poolys 
be  released  out  of  prison  on  his  putting  in  twenty  pounds   securitje  to  the  ^'^  "^°°' 
keeper  of  the  prison,  to  answer  for  his  offence  at  the  next  Court  of  Assistants. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Timothy  Cooper,  craving  the  remlttment  of  the  Ans'  to  Timo- 
forfeiture  of  a  tenn  pounds  bond,  wherein  he  stood  for  the  good  behaviour  of  "'y.?'"'P'^ 
John  Jarvice,  the  Courf  remitted  the  same  to  twenty  shillings. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  M'"  Deane  Winthrop,  M'"  Jn"  Tincker,  M'  Tho  Groaten  a  new 
Hinckley,  &(3,  &  of  Leiu  W-"  Martin,  Timothy  Cooper,  &6,  the  Court  P'^°'''"°°- 
judgeth  meete  to  graunt  the  petlconers  eight  miles  square  in  the  place  desired, 
to  make  a  comfprtable  plantacbn,  which  henceforth  shall  be  called  Groaten,  for- 
m-'ly  knoune  by  the  name  of  Petapawag  ;  that  M"^  Danforth,  of  Cambridge,  w"^ 
such  as  he  shall  associate  to  him,  shall  and  heereby  is  desired  to  lay  It  out  w"'all 
convenient  speede,  that  so  no  incouragement  may  be  wanting  to  the  petlconers 
for  a  speedy  procuring  of  a  godly  minister  amongst  them  ,•  provided,  that  none 
Bhall  enjoy  any  part  or  porcbn  of  that  land  by  guift  from  the  selectmen  of 
that  place  but  such  who  shall  build  bowses  on  theire  lotts  so  given  them  once 
•w"'in  eighteene  months  from  the  time  of  the  sajd  tounes  laying  out,  or  tounes 
graunt  to  such  persons ;  and  for  the  present,  M'"  Deane  Winthrop,  M''  Jn° 
Tincker,  M"'  Thomas  Hlncly,  Dolor  Dauis,  W""  Martin,  Mathew  Harrington, 
Jn"  Witt,  and  Timothy  Cooper  are  appointed  the  selectmen  for  the  sajd  toune 
of  Groaten  for  one  two  yeares  fi-om  the  tjme  it  is  lajd  out,  to  lay  out  and  dis- 
pose of  particcular  lotts,  not  exceeding  twenty  acres  to  each  house  lott,  and  to 
order  the  prudentlall  affaires  of  the  place ;  at  the  end  of  w'^''  tjme  other  select- 
men shallbe  chosen,  and  appointed  in  theire  roomes,  the  selectmen  of  Groaten 
giving  M'  Danforth  such  sattlsfaction  for  his  service  and  paines  as  they  &  he 
shall  agree. 

Whereas  M'  Nathaniell  Edwards,  about  18  mon"==  since,  on  his  retoume  Order  ab' 
from    Berbadoes,    departe    this    life,    and    administracbn   to    his    estate   was  ^^*!'^"^^- 
graunted  to  Joseph  Hills,  of  Maulden,  vnto  whom,  for  his  funerall  and  other- 


236  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1655.      wise,  there  is  something  due,  as  also  to  M"'  Theoder  Atkinson,  M''  Thomas 
■'^  Broughton,  &  Nathaniell  "Williams,  w'''',  if  they  should  be  issued  by  sute  of 

29  May.  . 

lawe,  might  be  troublesome  to  Courts,  and  shortning  the  estate,  to  the  losse 
and  daiiiage  of  the  credito''s,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  all 
such  debts  as  aforesajd,  and  otherwise,  as  shall  be  made  to  appeare  vnto  the 
magistrates  of  Boston  or  Charlestoune  Court,  and  by  them  be  allowed  of  to 
be  truly  due  out  of  the  sajd  Edwards  estate,  shallbe  sattisfied  as  farre  as  the 
sajd  estate  will  extend  w*out  suite  in  lawe. 

Ans'  to  Steven  In  ans''  to  the  petioon  of  Steven  Day,  of  Cambridge,  craving  that  the 

graunt  of  this  Court  of  three  hundred  acres  of  land  to  him  for  recompence 
of  his  care  and  charg  in  furthering  the  worke  of  printing,  w*  was  in  the  yeare 
1641,  might  be  recorded,  the  record  whereof  appeares  not,  the  Court  graunts 
his  request,  and  doth  hereby  confirme  the  former  graunt  thereof  to  him. 

Ans' to  Ann  In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Ann  Colcord,  wife  of  Edward  Colcord,  the 

Coicor  3  Coiut  doth  graunt  the  peticbner  liberty  to  revejw  any  case  according  to  hir 

desire  to  recouer  any  hir  just  rights.  • 

[*205.]  *In  ans"^  to  the  petic6n  of  Cap?  Brjan  Pendleten,  the  Court  declares,  that 

Ans'  to  Cap'      j^g  jj^^  f^\[  power  from  this  Court,  the  last  yeare,  to  act  in  the  premisses,  and 

Pendletons 

peticon.  expected  an  inventory  of  that  estate  to  be  brought  into  this  Court  accordingly, 

and  therefore  expect  the  peticoner  should  proceed  according  to  an  ordinary 
course  of  lawe  for  the  accomplishment  of  this  Courts  order  in  the  case. 
Ans'  to  M'  In  ans''  to   the  peticon  of   Thomas   Kemble,   of   Charlstoune,   humbly 

gp^  craving    craving  that   some   course    might  be   taken  for  his   releife,   y'  his 

accompts  might  be  audited  in  reference  to  his  m',  M''  Rich,  &6,  the  Court 
judgeth  it  meete  to  leaue  him  without  other  answer  than  this,  i.  e.,  that, 
vntill  he  be  sued  heere  by  his  master.  Rich,  or  his  attourney,  who  cann  best 
sattisfy  the  truth  of  his  accompts,  and  who  hath  also  power  to  accept  of  them 
and  give  him  a  discharge,  or  he  may  sue  his  master.  Rich,  in  England. 
Ans'  to  M'  In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Joseph  Hill,  Abraham  Hill,  Jn°  Wajte,  Jn° 

petiSon '''  Sprage,  Ralph  Shephard,  Jn"  Vppam,  James  Greene,  &  Thomas  Call,  in  w"** 
they  humbly  acknowledg  the  offenc  they  gaue  to  the  Court  &  seuerall 
churches  about  the  ordjnation  of  M"^  Mathewes,  &6,  and  therein  also  craving  a 
remittment  of  thirteene  pounds  six  shillings  and  eight  pence,  p'  of  a  fine  not 
yett  sattisfied,  the  Court  doth  well  approove  and  accept  of  the  peticoners  ac- 
knowledgments of  theire  irregular  actings  in  those  times,  but  vnderstanding 
much,  if  not  most,  of  the  fine  being  pajd  for,  &  that  the  rest  is  secured  and 
should  long  since  haue  binn  pajd  in,  they   see  not  cawse  to   graunt  theire 

request  in  that. 
Ans'  to  Nor- 
folk peticon.  In  ans"'  to  the  peticbn  of  of  Samuel  Hall  &  Henry  Dowe,  in  behalfe  of  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  237 

county  of  Norfolke,  craving  some  releife  of  this  Court  for  the  ease  of  y"  county 
in  p'  of  thcire  County  Court  charges,  the  Court  declares  the  lawc  hath  already 
provided  for  such  cases. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticbn  of  Richard  Marjerum,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  An'  to  Rich. 
to  referr  the  peticoner  for  releife  in  his  case  to  a  Court  of  justice.  petiCon 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Zackariah  Fitch  and  Josiah  Dasten,  itt  is  or-  Highway  by 
dered,  that  the  last  countrje  high  way  mencoued  in  theire  peticon  shall,  and 
is  heereby,  suspended  from  being  made  vse  of  for  present,  and  that  the  first 
high  way  formerly  lajd  out  shallbe  made  vse  of  and  accouniptcd  only  the 
countrje  highway  till  this  Court  shall  take  fm-ther  order,  that  so  not  only  pres- 
ent coutencons  and  sujtes  of  lawe  may  be  prevented,  but  further  opportunity 
for  better  inforniacSn  may  be  giuen  to  this  Court  for  the  regulating  thereof. 

In   ans"'  to   the   peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Concord,  the  Court  doth  Ans'  to  Con- 
graunt  them  five  thousand  acres  of  land  for  feeding,  according  to  theire  pe- 
ticon, provided  it  hinder  not  any  former  graunts. 

Vppon  informactSn  from  Majo''  Willard,  by  a  letter  from  Esdras  Read,  a  new  pianta- 
Edward  Spalden,  W"  Fletcher,  &6,  inhabitants  of  a  new  plantacon,  that  the  c"i"^-f  j 
noumber  of  inhabitants,  according  to  the  time   p>fixt  in  the  Courts  graunt, 
were  there  settled  at  theire  request,  the  Couit  doth  graunt  the  name  thereof 
to  be  called  Chelmsford. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticbn  of  seuerall  proprieto''^  &  inhabitants  of  Shawshin,  Biliireca,  new 
humbly  desiring  a  tract  of  land  lying  nere  the  lyne  of  the  farmes  of  John  and  ^ '"''°' 
Robert  Blood,  &  so  along  by  the  side  of  Concord  Riuer,  &d,  the  Court  graunts  Con  of  Shaw- 

.  .  ^         ^  shin,  alias 

theire  request  m  that  respect,  so  as  it  hinder  not  former  graunts,  and  graunt  BiUiricay. 
the  name  of  the  plantacSn  to  be  called  Billii-ikeyca, 

The  Court  doth  graunt  the  president,  M'  Chancy,  fiue  hundred  acres,  Biliireca 
free  of  former  graunts,  &  not  hindering  a  plantacon,  so  as  he  continew  in  y'  j^^^'  „aunted 
place  three  yeares.  t"  M'  Chancy. 

In  reference  to  the  second  particcular  retourned  by  the  coiiiittee  in  M"'  Courts  judgm' 
Giffords  case,  the  Court  doth  judge  that  M""  Gyfford  was  legally  discharged  "ge  abo' 50" ^ 
from  the  execution  levjed  vppon  him  for  ffivety  odd  shillings  by  the  apprise-  execution,  23 

June. 

ment  of  a  peece  of  ordinance,  vppon  which  the  execution  was  levjed,  and 
therevppon  the  gunn  was  legally  apprised  to  the  vse  of  Capt  Keajne. 

*M''  Edward  Rushworth,  deputy  for  Yorke,  on  his  vrgent  occasions,  at     [*206.] 
his  request,  is  dismist  from  any  further  attendanc  on  this  Court.  M'  Rushworth 

In  ans"'  to  the   peticbn  of    M"'  Charles  Chancy,  praesident  of  Harvard  j^^^.^gw 
Colledge,  &(?,  the  Treasurer  is  desired  to  disbiu-se  the  soine  of  thirty  pounds  Chancys  peti- 

.  £on>  P°  26. 

to  furnish  his  necessary  occasions,  to  be  repajed  out  of  the  first  rents  of 
the  ferry. 


238 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1655. 


29  May. 


The  Court,  hauing  heard  the  deposicons  of  Elias  Parkeman  &  Joseph 
Beamis  in  reference  to  reproachful!  &  scandalous  speeches  vttered  by  M' 
W""  Aubrey,  hearing  also  his  ans'',  ordered  the  sajd  M"^  Aubrey  should  be 
severely  reprooved  in  open  Court  by  the  GoQno',  and  that  he  therevppon  make 
a  publicke  acknowledgement  of  such  his  reproachfuU  speeches,  or  els  to  be 
bound  to  his  good  behaviour  during  the  Courts  pleasure.  This  was  donn  & 
pformed  accordingly. 

In  ans'  to  the  desire  of  our  beloued  bretheren  &  neighbors,  the  inhabit- 
itants  of  Shawshin,  requesting  imunitjes  &  freedom  from  all  publicke  rates  & 
charges  at  Cambridg,  and  that  all  the  land  of  that  place,  aswell  those  appertain- 
ing to  the  p''nt  inhabitants  of  Cambridge  as  those  graunted  them  by  the  Court, 
might  belong  intirely  to  that  place,  for  the  better  incouragement  &  carrying 
on  of  pubHcq,  charges  that  will  necessarily  there  fall  out,  — 


Cambridg  & 

Shawshins 

agreem'. 


"Wee,  whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  being  impowred  by  the  inhabit- 
ants of  Cambridge,  at  a  publicke  meeting  of  the  toune,  the  SO**"  of  January, 
1654,  to  make  such  propposicons  &  conclusions  therein  as  to  vs  might  seeme 
most  meete  &  aequall,  doe  make  theise  following  propposicons  w""  refference  to 
the  compljance  of  the  aboue  named,  o'  beloved  bretheren  &  neighbors,  the 
inhabitants  of  Shawshin,  and  the  approbation  of  the  Gennerall  Court  for 
the  full  conclusion  thereof:  That  all  the  lands  belonging  to  that  place  called 
by  the  name  of  Shawshin,  with  its  appurtnances  or  latter  graunts  made  by  the 
Gennerall  Court,  as  well  those  the  proprietye  &  peculiar  right  whereof  be- 
longcth  to  any  particcular  person,  as  those  graunted  by  the  toune  or  church  of 
Cambridge  to  that  place  for  a  touneshipp,  as  also  those  given  by  the  inhabit- 
ants of  Cambridge  for  the  furtherance  and  incouragement  of  a  plantacon  there, 
shall  be  one  iutire  touneshipp  or  plantacon,  alwajes  freed  &  acquitted  fi-om 
all  manner  of  comon  charges  &  rates,  of  what  nature  or  kindesoeuer,  due  or 
belonging  of  right  to  be  pajd  vnto  Cambridge  by  virtue  of  any  graunt  of  that 
place  vnto  them  by  the  Gennerall  Court. 

2.  That  whensoeuer  any  of  the  inhabitants  of  Cambridg,  theire  heires 
or  assignes,  whither  in  that  place  or  elswhere,  shall  make  any  improovement 
of  theire  lands  aboue  praised,  more  or  lesse,  by  fencing,  building,  or  break- 
ing vp,  or  mowing  of  the  meadows,  euery  such  person  shall  pay  to  the  coirion 
charges  of  that  place,  i.  e.,  Shawshin,  suitable  to  his  or  theire  improovement 
of  the  aforesajd  kind,  in  due  proporcon  w*  the  rest  of  the  inhabitants  in  that 
place,  the  whole  estate  and  improovemcnts  of  the  place  being  lajd  at  an  aequall 
&  proportionable  rate. 

3.  That  the  inhabitants  of  Shawshin  shall,  at  all  time  and  tjmes  heere- 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS   BAY   IN   NEW   ENGLAND.  239 

after  foreuer,  acquitt  &  discharge  the  inhabitants  of  Cambridge  from  all  coinon     16  5  5. 
charges,   rates,   dues,   dutjes,   &    incombrances   by  any  manner   of  wajes   or    '       >r— ^ 

29  Mav 

meanes  due  by  them,  to  be  pajd,  executed,  or  performed,  by  vertue  of  theire 
interest  in  that  place,  given  vnto  them  by  the  graunt  of  the  Gennerall  Court. 
4.  That  whensoever  any  of  the  inhabitants  of  Cambridge  shall  alienate 
theire  p'nt  interest  in  any  of  the  above  named  lands  from  themselves  &  heires, 
then  the  sajd  lands  shall,  in  all  respects,  be  liable  to  coinon  charges  of  that 
place,  as  though  those  particcular  persons  had  theire  graunts  thereof  made 
them  fioni  the  sajd  toune,  or  plantacon,  of  Shawshin. 

*5.  That  no  person  or  persons  which  either  haue  had  or  hereafter  shall  [*207.] 
haue  any  lott  or  allotment  graunted  them  in  the  aboue  named  touneshipp 
of  Shawshin,  in  case  they  make  not  improovement  thereof  by  building  and 
fencing,  especially  the  houselott,  shall  haue  any  power  to  make  any  sale  or 
guift  thereof  to  any  other  person,  but  such  land  and  alotments  shall  retourne 
againe  to  the  toune,  i.  e.,  Shawshin  ;  and  in  case,  after  such  like  improove- 
ment, any  person  shall  then  remoove,  to  the  deserting  and  leaving  theire 
bretheren  and  neighbors  that  haue  adventured  by  theire  encouragement  to  setle 
there  w*"^  them,  no  such  person  or  persons,  for  seven  yeares  next  ensuing 
the  confirmation  heereof  shall  haue  power  to  make  either  sale,  or  guift,  or  any 
aljenation  thereof  to  any  person  or  psons  whatsouer,  saue  only  vnto  such 
as  the  greater  part  of  the  inhabitants  then  resident  at  Shawshin  shall  consent 
vnto  and  approove  of 

6.  That  in  case  any  greivance  shall  hereafter  happen  to  arise,  which  for 
the  present  neither  side  foresee,  nor  is  heereby  clearely  determined,  that  then  all 
such  matter  of  greivance  or  difference  shallbe  from  tjme  to  tjme  heard  and 
determined  by  meete  persons,  three  or  five,  indifferently  chosen  by  the  pru- 
dentiall  men  of  Cambridg  &  Shawshin. 

And  these  aforementjoned  proppositions  to  be  subscribed  by  all  the 
present  inhabitants  of  Shawshin,  and  by  all  such  as  heereafter  shall  haue 
any  alottments  graunted  them  there,  and  retourne  hereof  made  to  the 
inhabitants  of  Cambridg  vf^Hn  tenn  dajes  after  the  end  of  the  first  ses- 
sion of  the  next  Gennerall  Court.  Given  vnder  our  hands  this  17""  2  in, 
1654,  by  vs, 

HENRY  DUNSTER, 

RICHARD   CHAMPNEY, 

EDWARD   GOFFE, 

JOHN   BRIDGE. 

These  propposicons  are  accepted  of  and  consented  vnto  by  vs  the  present 


240  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  55.      inhabitants  of  Shawshin  ;  and  wee  doe  humbly  craue  this  honnored  Court  to 
'       "^    "^    confirme  and  record  the  same. 

29  May. 

Yo''  humble  servants, 

RALPH   HILL,  Sen, 
WILLJAM   FRENCH, 
JN°   STERNE, 
W«   PATTIN, 
GEORG  FARLEY, 
RALPH   HILL,  Jun, 
JN°   CROE, 
JAMES   PARKER, 
JONATHAN  DANFORTH, 
HEN:    JEFTES, 
W   CHAMBERLYN, 
JN°   PARKER, 
ROBT:   PARKER. 

Theire  request  was  graunted  by  the  Com-t. 

Graunt  of  It  is  Ordered,  that  the  iland  called  Catta  Hand,  being  about  a  two  acres, 

Jn»  Endecot     ^Y^^^S  neere  to  Marble  Head,  shall  and  is  heereby  graimted  to  Jn°  Endecott, 
^^1'-  Esq),  the  honnored  Goiin'',  &  to  his  heires. 

Ans'  to  Cap'  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Cap?  Thomas  Wiggins  for  such  a  quantitje  of 

200  ac"  anted  '  ^^^'^^  ^^  the  Court  shall  judg  meete,  in  recompence  of  his  service  at  Yorke, 

^^^'  Kitteiy,  Wells,  &S,  the  Court  doth  graunt  liim  two  hundred  acres  of  land, 

in  such  place  where  he  shall  choose,  on  the  riuer  that  leads  vp  to  Choche- 

chowicke,  to  be  lajd  out  by  M''  Edward  Rushworth,  M''  Hateevill  Nutter,  and 

M"^  Edward  Starbucke,  or  any  two  of  them,  at  his  charge,  making  theire  re- 

tourne  to  the  Court. 

M'  Pajnes  bill  An  account  was  presented  to  this  Court  of  the  charges  expended  at  Ips- 

refer"oV°      wich,  at  the  councills  meeting  there,  w'^''  amounted  to  twenty  fower  pounds  sev- 

counsiii  at        enteene  shillings   and  three   pence,  w*^""  the  Court  allowed  of,  &  ordered  the 

Ipswich. 

Tresurer  to  make  M""  Robt  Pajne  the  best  pay  he  can  to  that  vallew. 

Left.  Turners  A  like  accompt  was  brought  in  by  Left  Robt  Turner,  of  the  charges  of 

or  y  sam  ^.j^^  counsell,  expended  at  Boston,  to  the  valew  of  three  pounds  foureteene  shil- 
lings and  tenpenc,  w'^'^  the  Court  allowed  of,  &  ordered  the  Tresurer  to  make 
him  sattisfaction. 

Ans'  to  Eliza-  j^  ^^gr  jg  ^j^g  peticon   of  Ehzabeth   Rider,  hir   husband  havinsf  left  hir 

beth  Riders  -^  ° 

peticon.  and  five  smale  children,  and  no  meanes  to  majntajne  both  hir  and  them  w"* 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS   BAY  IN   NEW  ENGLAND.  241 

necessaiy  ffoodc  and  apparrell,  &S,  desiring  libertje  from  this  Court  to  sell  a 
house  and  land  in  Dorchester,  wliich  hir  father,  W™  Lane,  gaue  to  hir  and  hir 
children,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  select  men  of  the  toune  of  Boston  shall  haue 
power  to  dispose  of  the  sajd  howse  and  land,  either  by  sale,  mortgage,  or  other- 
wise, as  they  shall  judge  meete,  for  the  vse  of  the  peticouer,  w"''  this  Court 
doth  heereby  confirnie  and  allowe. 

*Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  M'  GyfFord  shall  be  sent  for,  and      [*208.] 
hath  libertje  to  come  w""  his  keeper  to  the  Court,  to  ans'  in  his  case. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  this  night  this  Court  shall  be  adjourned  to  the  last      8:4; 55. 
fowerth  day  in  October  next,  at  eight  of  the  clocke  in  the  morning. 

The  same  night,  the  Court,  meeting  together,  adjourned  to  7  of  y"  clocke 
next  morning. 

The  Couit,  meeting  at  the  tjme,  reassumed  the  debat  about  M'  GifFords 
buisnes,  and  itt  was  put  to  the  quaestion,  because  tjme  was  streight,  whither 
this  Court  should  be  adjourned  to  Twesday  come  three  weekes.  The  Court 
resolved,  by  vote,  it  should  not  be  adjourned  to  Twesday  3  weeks,  but  to  the 
fowerth  third  day  in  October  next. 

On  the  importunate  request  of  M'  Gyfford,  at  last  the  Court  voted,  that 
this  Court  should  be  adjourned  to  Wendsday  next  come  seven  night  at  eight 
of  the  clocke  in  the  morning,  to  heare  M"'  Gyffords  case. 

M"'  Robt  Knight  &  M"^  W""  Phillips  came  into  the  Court,  and  engaged  to 
sattisfy  the  charges  of  the  Court. 

The  Court  adjourned  accordingly. 


The  Court  mett  att  the  tjme  appointed,  being  20"'  June,  1655.  20  June. 

Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  by  the  words  '  to  heare  M'  Gif- 
fords  case,'  in  y"=  last  vote  of  the  last  sessions,  is  meant  the  whole  case.  M' 
Gyfford  appeared,  &  y*  remonstrance  he  presented  was  read  in  open  Courte. 
After  some  agitations  about  M''  Giffords  buisnes,  M''  Josiah  Winslow  appeared 
before  the  Court,  where  M"'  Gifford  was,  and  after  some  time  allowed  him  to 
determine  whither  he  would  proceed  in  the  case,  he  did,  in  open  Court, 
voluntarily  expresse  himself  that  he  did  lay  doune  his  coinission  or  power 
that  he  had  from  M'  Bex  and  Company. 

Whereas  tliis  Court  did  graunt  to  M'^  Gyfford  to  heare  his  whole  case,  and  Courts  judg- 
no  defendant  appearing,  the  Court  sawe  not  cawse  to  proceed  ;  itt  is  therefore  mg-^jjig  ^^^^ 
ordered,  that  the  sajd  Gifford,  making  out  legall  processe,  shall  haue  his  cawse, 
•w°^  was  trjed  in  Nouember  last,  betwixt  the  attornejes  of  the  vndertakers  of 

VOL.  IV.  PAKT    I.  31 


242 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


1  G  5  5. 


20  June. 


the  iron  workes  and  the  sajd  GyfFord,  heard  by  way  of  revejw,  at  the  next  ses- 
sions of  the  Gennerall  Court,  in  October,  and  that  in  the  meane  tjme  the  sajd 
Gifford,  putting  in  sufRcijent  bajle,  to  the  value  of  twenty  three  hundred  pounds, 
to  render  himself  a  prisoner  at  the  prison  at  Boston,  the  second  day  of  the  next 
sessions  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  and  in  the  mean  tjme  once  euery  month  to  ap- 
peare  at  the  meeting  house  in  Boston,  there  to  continew  during  the  time  of  the 
lecture,  and  lye  that  night  in  prison,  shall  be  freed  from  his  imprisonment  in 
the  meane  tjme,  and  be  at  libertje  to  follow  his  occasions ;  alwajes  provided, 
and  it  is  to  be  vnderstood,  that  if  the  sajd  GyfFord  shall  not,  vppon  the  revejw 
of  the  action  and  libertje  graunted  by  the  Gennerall  Court,  reverse  the  whole 
judgment  and  execution  now  vppon  him,  he  shall,  for  the  remainder  of  the 
sajd  judgment,  in  case  part  thereof  be  taken  of,  retoume  and  continew  to  the 
state  and  condicon  wherein  he  now  stands,  for  such  soine  as  shall  not  be  taken 
of  vppon  the  revejw,  w^'out  any  furthere  execution  or  processe ;  and  it  is  de- 
clared by  this  Court,  that  if  any  one  or  two  person  or  persons  shall  appeare  at 
the  sajd  Court  to  defend  the  sajd  action  on  the  behalf  of  the  vndertakers,  the 
Court  will  willingly  attend  theire  pleas. 


[*209.] 

M'  Giffords 
bajle. 


*M''  Sain  Mauericke,  of  Nodles  Hand,  M''  W""  Bartholmew,  of  Ipswich, 
Safii  Bennett,  of  Lynne,  Evan  Thomas,  of  Boston,  &  Left  Thomas  Marshall, 
of  Redding,  appeared  before  the  whole  Court,  and  acknowledged  themselves 
justly  bound  to  the  Tresurer  of  the  Massachusetts  jurisdiccbn  for  the  tjme 
being,  in  the  full  value  of  twenty  three  hundi'ed  pounds,  joinctly  and  seuer- 
ally,  if  the  sajd  M''  Gifford  shall  performe  the  order  aboue  written,  in  referenc 
to  his  being  a  true  prisoner,  one  a  month,  and  retoiu-ning  him  to  prison  on  the 
second  day  of  the  next  session  of  this  Court,  in  October,  no  inevitable  hand 
of  God  hindering.     This  was  acknowledged  by  each  of  them  in  open  Court. 

EDW:    EAWSON,  Secret. 


Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  broad  booke  of  M''  Gyffords,  now  in  the  hands  of 
the  secretary,  shall  be  deliuered  into  the  hands  of  M''  John  GyfFord,  to  take  a 
coppy  of,  so  as  he  retourne  it  into  the  secretarys  hand  within  eight  weekes, 
vndefaced ;  and  before  he  receive  it,  to  give  the  secretary  a  note  vnder  his 
hand  of  the  foljos  and  seuerall  Ijnes  &  soiSes  in  each  page,  that  so  if  any 
alteracbn  be  made  it  may  be  knoune. 

The  two  barrells  of  powder  borrowed  by  y'^  Dejit  Goliuo''  of  the  survejor 

generall,  &  spent  at  y'=  funerall  of  y'  late  Majo''  Generall  Gibons,  should  be  dis- 

Major  Gibens    charged  out  of  the  countrje  store ;  and  it  is  further  ordered,  that  the  thirty 
funerall. 

two  pounds  of  pouder  spent  on  y"  same  occasion  by  Charles  Toune  shall  be  al- 
lowed them  as  an  additjon  to  theire  next  yearly  proportion  of  pouder. 


Y»  secret,  to 
dd.  M'  Gifford 
his  broad 
booke  on  con- 
dicon. 


Y'  countrjs 
allow,  of 
pouder  at 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  243 

On  certificat  vnder  the  hands  of  Edw  Hutchinson,  Tho  Danfoith,  &  Jn"      16  55. 
Sherman,  y^  y"  land  graunted  to  y*  military  company  at  y"  head  of  Cambridge  "' 

_  20  June. 

lyne  out  of  y"  wast  land  there,  y*  y^^  find  there  is  not  fitt  acconiodacons  for  jiiiutary. 
such  a  farme,  itt  is  ordered,  y'  y''  company  may  haue  five  hundred  acres  of  y 
sajd  land  lajd  out  betwixt  Cambridge  and  Concord  lyne,  neare  to  Concord  lyne, 
w'^"  is  vppon  Shawshira  Riuer,  as  shall  be  found  most  convenient,  and  the 
other  five  hundred  acres  to  be  layd  out  vnto  them  out  of  y*  coiuon  lands  yet 
vndisposed  of  in  the  southwest  of  Meadfeild. 

This  Coiut   is   adjourned  to  the  4"^  o"^  day  in   October  next,  being  the 
twenty  fowerth  day  of  y'  moneth. 


*Jtt  a  Gennerall  Court,  held  at  Boston,  the  24"'  of  October,  1655.      [*210.] 

24  October. 

THE  Court  being  mett,  the  question  was  put  whither,  the  Magistrates  and  y-  leg^llity  of 
Deputjes  now  mett,  itt  be  judged  to  be  a  legall  Gennerall  Courte,  some  y  Court, 
members  of  the  Coiu-t  not  appearing  till  late  the  night  before.     Itt  was  re- 
solved on  the  affirmative. 

M'  Samuell    Mauericke,  M'  Bartholmew,  Evan  Thomas,  &5,  presented  M'  MaOick, 

rt  .         y-.  -I.  1      •  1  ^^^  Barthol., 

M'  Jn"  Gyfl^ord  before  the  Courte,  according  to  theire  engagement,  and  re-  &c,  discharged. 
toumed  him  to  prison,  on  which  theire  bond  was  discharged. 

M"^  Jn°  Gyffbrd,  appearing  before  the  Court,  produced  his  attachment,  M'  Giffords 

Ti/'T/-^  ,.  «,       attachm*of 

dated  the  15"^  of  October,  55,  w"^"^  was  read  before  the  Court,  w'"  a  noate  ot  the  ^^^  g.  comp' 
connstable  of  Lynne,  authorizing  Edward  Richards  to  be  his  attorney,  to  serve  **'*'"• 
that  attachment,  who  retourned  he  had  attached  a  debt  in  the  hands  of 
Richard  Hood,  of  sixteene  pounds  thirteene  shillings  and  eleven  penc,  as  be- 
longing to  the  old  company  of  the  iron  works,  together  w"^  three  muskitts,  one 
sword,  and  one  paire  of  bandeleeres,  in  y°  sd  Jn°  Gyffords  hands,  and  one 
axe  &  one  spade  in  y"  hands  of  Theophilus  Bayly,  as  on  y<'  backside  of  y" 
attachment  appeares. 

Cap?  W™  Hauthorne  appeared  before  the  Magistrates,  and  vndertooke  to  Capt.  Hath- 
discharge  the  charges  of  theire  house  during  the  Coruts  heai-ing  of  M'^  Gyf-  t™^fs™Mge™ 

fords  cause.  the  charge  of 

y  Court  in  M' 

The  Court  spent  seuerall  dajes  in  hearing  what  M"^  Jn°  GiflTord  could  say,  Giffords  case. 
in  reading  &  examining  the  best  they  could,  no  defendant  appearing,  and  in 
pervsing  the  seuerall  evidences  then  brought  in,  or  y'  was  in  the  secretarys 
hands,  having  reference  also  to  M''  Giffords  bookes,  which  also  was  in  Court, 
and  proceeded  to  passe  these  votes  herevnder  exprest. 


244 


THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1655. 


31  October. 

Courts  rejec- 
tion of  M' 
Gitfords  oath. 
31:8rao,&o,.55. 

M'  Gifford 
charged  \\^ 
8«0t<>  of  iron, 
&o. 


2  :  9  mo,  55. 


2  :  9  mo,  55. 


County  Courts 
adjour"',  25 : 
8  mo,  55. 
Heidens  al- 
lowance. 


[*211.] 

Ans'  to  Edw. 
Michelsons 
peti.  31:8:55. 

Ans'  to  Rosse 
his  peticon. 


A  markett  at 
Hampton 
efly  5"'  day  of 
y  weeke. 

M'  Hubbards 
priviledge  to 
marry,  &c. 

Nasons  cen- 
Bure. 


The  qujestion  being  put  whitlier  M'  John  Gyffords  oath  shallbe  accepted 
as  an  evidenc  to  cleare  his  accompts  in  reference  to  the  iron  workes,  as  the  sajd 
accompts  now  stand,  itt  was  resolved  on  the  negative. 

It  being  put  to  the  quaestion,  whither  the  receipt  of  M"'  Gyffords  ab 
stract,  presented  to  tliis  Court  vnder  M''  AubrSys  hand,  in  reference  to  sixty 
five  tonne  seven  hundred  and  twenty  three  pounds  of  barr  iron,  twelve  tonne 
one  hundi-cd  two  quarters  of  rod  iron,  seven  tonne  fower  hundred  one  quarter 
and  twenty  five  pounds  of  potts  and  cast  ware,  together  with  the  deposicous 
of  .In"  Blajn"  and  Theophilus  Bayly,  doe  legally  proove  the  deliucry  of  one 
hundred  twenty  and  three  tonus  eighteene  hundred  two  quarters  &  twenty 
seven  pounds  of  barr  iron,  nineteen  tonne  sixteene  hundred  of  rod  iron,  & 
seven  tonne  seventeene  hundred  one  half  and  eleven  pounds  of  potts  and  cast 
ware  to  the  sajd  Aubrey,  so  as  the  sajd  Gifford  should  be  discharged  thereof. 
Itt  was  resolved  in  the  negative. 

Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  ]\I''  Gifford  putting  in  as  sufficijcnt 
baile  for  twenty  three  hundred  pounds,  as  he  did  formerly,  that  he  will  render 
himself  a  true  prisoner  on  the  second  day  of  the  next  sessions,  shall  hauc 
his  libertje  to  goe  abroad  ;  in  the  meane  tjme  the  securitje  to  be  put  into  the 
keeper,  as  two  magis's  shall  adjudge. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  next  County  Court  to  be  held  at  Boston,  being 
the  SO"*  of  this  October,  shall  be  adjourned  to  the  6"^  of  Nouember  next. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Susan  Heiden,  craving  this  Courts  charritable 
releife  in  referenc  to  the  afflicting  hand  of  God  on  hir  in  referenc  to  hir  sonn, 
the  Court  judgeth  it  meet  to  allow  the  petictiner,  for  tliis  yeai'e,  five  pounds, 
to  be  pajd  her  out  of  Braintrje  countrje  rate. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  Michelson,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete 
to  confirme  the  lawe  respecting  strong  waters  &  other  flfees  therein  exprest  to 
him  for  two  yeares  more. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  James  Rosse,  a  Scotchman,  the  Court  graunts 
his  request,  i.  e.,  his  liberty  to  goe  home  w*''  his  master,  John  Euddocke, 
on  his  humble  acknowledgment  of  his  fault  and  promise  of  his  good  be- 
havioiu'. 

At  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Hampton,  by  theire  deputy,  itt  is  ordered, 
that  there  shallbe  a  markett  kept  there  one  day  in  euery  week,  viz.,  on  the  fifth 
day,  which  is  theire  lecture  day. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  W'^  Hubbard  shall  and  is  heereby  impowred  to 
marry  David  Fiske,  of  Cambridg,  &  Sarah  Wilson,  of  Ipswich,  if  they  are 
pubUshed  according  to  lawe. 

The  Court,  having  considered  of  the    seuerall  testimonjes  brought  in 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS    BAY   IN    NEW  ENGLAND.  245 

against  Richard  Nason,  the  prisoner  now  accused  for  blasphemy,  doe  not  judge      1655. 
him  so  guilty  of  that  fact  as  that  by  oiu-  lawe  he  ought  to  dye,  but  judge  that    '       '    "^ 
he  shall  bring  in  securitje,  to  the  value  of  forty  pounds,  before  some  of  the 
magistrates,  to  be  of  good  behaviour,  and  so  to  stand  bound  during  this  Courts 
pleasure,  and  discharge  the  prison  before  he  be  released,  and  allowed  Philip 
Chestly,  a  wittnes  against  him,  two  pounds  sixteene  shillings  costs. 

The  Court,  having  heard  &  considered  the  seuerall  testimonjes  brought  in  Indjan  maids 

C6Tlfi  111*6 

against  the  Indian  majde,  who  hath  been  on  trjall  for  killing  of  another  majd 
by  shooting  of  a  charged  peece,  doe  not  finde  hir  guilty  of  wilfull  murther, 
so  as  by  our  lawe  shee  ought  to  dye,  yet  for  such  a  great  misdemeanor,  for  ter- 
ror to  others,  and  to  prevent  the  like  practizes  for  y"  tjme  to  come,  doe  sentence 
hir  to  be  whipt  with  tcnn  stripes. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  ]VP  Richard  Hitchcocke,  after  the  Courte  had  Ans'  to  M' 
fully  hearde  the  case  betweene  him  «&  Thomas  Warner,  the  Court  determined,  peticon  ag- 
that  notwithstanding  what  evidenc  Thomas  "Warner  produced  in  the  case,  the  ^"°''''- 
sajd  Hitchcocke  was  free  from  blame  in  graunting  the  hue  &  cry,  and  that  he 
should  be  allowed  thirty  shillings  costs  by  the  sajd  Warner. 

This  Court  was  adjourned  to  Twesday  sevennight,  being  13"^  instant,  at 
eight  of  the  clocke  in  the  morning,  2"*  9  m°,  55. 


The  Court  mett  againe  on  the  IS""  of  Nouember,  1655,  the  time  appointed.  13  November 

Present,  Jn°  Endccot,  Es^,  GoQ,  Capt  Tho  Wigins, 

Ri  Bellingham,  Esf ,  Dep'  GoQ,  Majo"'  Genn'  Dennison, 

M''  Symon  Bradstreet,  Majo'  Symon  Willard, 

M'  Sam  Symonds,  Majo''  Humphrey  Atherton. 
Capt  Robert  Bridges, 

Forasmuch  as  this  Court  is  informed  there  are  some  wittnesses  in  Col- 
cords  case  that  were  not  allowed  theire  charges,  itt  is  ordered,  that  it  shall  be 
in  the  liberty  of  Salisbury  Court  to  sattisfy  such  wittnesses  charges  out  of  the 
fower  pounds  thirteene  shillings  in  M"'  Stanions  hands,  as  a  fine  to  the  coim- 
trje,  w*  yett  is  not  pajd  in. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  rate  for  this  yeare,  together  with  an  addition  of  Prices  of  com 
one  quarter  part  more,  be  paid  in  wheate  and  barly  at  fower  shillings  and  *°J°  ''"""^''J® 
sixe  pence  p  bushell,  pease  at  fower  shillings,  rye  at  three  shillings  sixpenc, 
and  Indjan  at  two  shillings  and  sixe  pence,  and  that  onehalfe  of  the  rate  be 
pajd  in  wheate,  barly,  or  pease ;  the  Indian  come  to  be  pajable  the  tenth  of 
March. 


246  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1655.  *This  Court,  taking  into  tlieire  serjous  consideracon  the  great  necessitje 

^1  of  vpholdiug  the  staple  comoditjes  of  this  countrje   for  the  supply  &  support 

of  the  inhabitants  thereof,  &  finding  by  experjence  that  the  bringing  in  of 

Prohibition  of  ™<iulte,  wheate,  barly,  bisket,  beife,  meale,  &  flower,  which  are  the  princippall 

malte,  &c,  on    conioditjes  of  this  countrje,  from  forraigne  parts,  to  be  exceeding  fi>judjcijall 

poenalty  of 

confiscation,  to  the  subsistance  of  this  place  and  people  here,  haue  therefore  ordered,  that 
no  person  whatsoeuer,  either  inhabitant  or  straunger,  shall,  directly  or  indirectly, 
after  the  first  of  March  next,  import  into  this  jurisdiccon,  from  any  part  of 
Europe,  any  of  the  aforesajd  provissions,  vnder  the  poenalty  of  confiscation 
of  the  same,  (except  it  be  for  the  shipps  provision,)  that  shall  be  so  imported, 
landed,  sett  to  sale,  or  otheruise  disposed  of,  contrary  to  the  intent  of  tliis 
order ;  and  it  is  further  ordered  and  enacted,  that  all  marshalls,  &  conustables 
where  no  marshall  is,  in  the  seuerall  tounes  in  this  jurisdiccon,  are  heereby 
required  &  impowercd  to  make  dilligent  search  w'Mn  theire  respective  tounes 
&  harboin-s  where  any  such  provisions  are  landed,  sold,  or  otheruise  disposed 
of,  and  to  make  seizure  of  the  same  for  the  vse  of  the  countrje,  for  w<''>  each 
and  euery  marshall  &  connstable  shall  haue  allowed  them  oil  fowerth  part  of 
what  shall  be  so  seized,  for  theire  care  &  paincs  heerein ;  and  all  former  lawes 
concerning  impost  vppon  any  of  the  provissions  aforesajd  are  heereby  repealed. 
Senjoriety  of  Whereas  this  Comt  hath  formerly  ordered,  that  in  all  tounes  where  tlie 

cap  m  OS  on.  ^Q^jj^]jgj.  q£  souldiers  shall  arise  to  two  hundred,  they  shallbe  two  companys 
in  such  tounes,  and  it  hath  pleased  God  to  increase  the  toune  of  Boston, 
that  acording  to  that  lawe  they  are  become  fower  companjes,  it  is  therefore 
ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  aforesajd  millitary 
companjes  of  Boston  shall  take  theire  senjoritje  amongst  themselves  by  turnes, 
viz.,  one  company  one  day  and  another  company  another  day,  &d,  and  so  to 
continew  till  this  Court  take  further  order  therein. 
Comitteeof  This  Court  cannot  but  be  very  sencible  of  the  state  and  condicou  of  this 

^'^  ^'  countiy  in  respect  of  the  mannifold  wants  already  vppon  vs,  &  fearing  what 

may  further  ensue,  if  Gods  prouidence  prevent  not,  beyond  what  wee  are  for 
present  able  to  see,  doe  judge  it  necessary,  &  account  ourselues  bound,  to  vse 
our  vtmost  endeavors  for  the  procuring  of  suitable  suppljes,  and,  as  a  meanes 
to  attajne  such  an  end,  haue  thought  it  meete  to  referr  it  to  the  seuerall 
coiuittees  heereafter  nominated  to  meete  together  in  theire  respectiue  countjes 
or  otheruise,  if  they  shall  judge  meete,  then  and  there  to  consider  of  some 
such  way  as  whereby  both  merchandizing  may  be  encouraged  &  the  hands  also 
of  the  husbandman  may  not  wax  weary  in  his  imployment,  and,  for  begetting 
a  right  vnderstanding  and  a  loving  compljance  betweene  both,  they  may  ad- 
vise together  or  assuadge  as  they  see  cawse,  &  the  result  of  such  theii-e  meet- 


13  November, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  247 

ings  to  present  to  the  next  Gennerall  Courte,  to  be  confirmed  and  allowed  as  16  55. 
they  shall  judge  meete,  and  to  consider  of  some  way  to  regulate  in  point  of 
■workemens  wages,  if  any  way  may  be  found.  The  names  of  the  persons  to  be 
implojed  in  this  worke  are,  for  SufFolke,  the  honnored  Gouernor,  *C'apt  Savage,  [*213.] 
TNI"'  Broughton,  Capl  Lusher,  Lieutennant  Clap,  &  M"'  W""  Paddy  ;  ffor  INIidle- 
sex,  ISIajo''  Symon  Willard,  M'  Richard  Russell,  Capt  Norton,  Cap?  Johnson, 
M'  Collins,  and  M""  Joseph  Hills ;  for  Essex,  Majo'  Gennerall  Dennison,  M' 
Robert  Pajne,  M'^  Edmond  Batter,  M'  Joseph  Jewett,  M""  IMetcalf,  and  M' 
Woodman ;  ffor  Norfolk,  Cap?  Thomas  Wiggin,  M''  Robert  Cleomans,  M"^ 
Samviell  Wiuslowe,  &  Samuell  Hall,  and  with  each  of  theise  comittees  the 
time  and  place  of  meeting  the  seuerall  magistrates  are  to  appoint. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  euery  counstable  that  now  is,  or  heereafter  hath  binn.  Constables 
w"'in  this  jurisdiccbn,  shall,  on  the  pcenalty  of  forfeiting  of  five  pounds,  cleere  to  make  vp 
vp  all  theire  accompts  w"^  the  Treasiu'er  for  the  rates  of  theire  seuerall  tounes,        '^  ^'"^" 

r  r  '  w*  y«  tr>r. 

by  the  fir'st  of  May  yearelye,  &  from  yeare  to  yeare,  till  the  Court  take  fur- 
ther order,  &  they  and  euery  of  them  are  heereby  impowred  to  impresse 
boates  or  carts  for  the  better  &  more  speedy  sending  in  the  rates  according  to 
the  tjmes  appointed  by  lawe. 

In   ans''  to    the    peticon    of   Henry  Messenger,   humbly  craving   (that,  Ans'  to  Henry 
whereas  he  is  recorded  as  guilty  of  a  lye  in  the  comissioners  of  Boston  booke  ^etijo"^'*'^*' 
of  records,  for  saying  he  had  corrected  his  sonne  for  his  miscarriage  at  the 
meeting  howse,  when  the  youth,  on  examination,  sajd  it  was  his  mother  that 
corrected  him,  &6,)  that  that  judgment  of  the  sajd  coinissioners  might  be  re- 
uersed,  the  Court  graunts  his  request,  viz.,  the  reuercbn  of  that  judgment. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  marshall  gennerall,  after  notice  giuen  to  such  of  The  marshalis 
the  tounes  as  are  behind  in  the  payment  of  what  the  lawe  requires  for  the  i^^^  ^,  „, 
late  Castle  rate,  shall,  at  or  before  the  tenth  of  March  next,  goe  to  such  tounes  *°"°^^  ""=  ^^- 

"  hind  in  y 

and  collect  the  same  with  such  sattisfaction  as  the  lawe  allowes.  Castle  rate. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  when  what  is  behind  fr-om  the  tounes  about  the  Castle  Major  Ather- 
rate  be  brought  in,  if  there  shall  be  more  need,  it  shallbe  in  the  liberty  of  (.harsTa  b-iiof 
jSIajo"^  Atherton  to  charge  a  bill  on  the  Tresm-er  for  twenty  pounds,  that  so  it  ^o"  on  y 

•  ^  Treasurer. 

may  not  lye  for  a  small  matter  vnfinished. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  capt  of  the  Castle  shalibe  contjnued  in  that  place  capt.  of  the 
for  another  yeare,  and  till  this  Court  take  fmther  order,  on  the  same  sallery  ^^^^^^  "^Tt' 
as  was  allowed  the  last  yeare,  if  he  accept  thereof. 

This  Court,  taking  into  consideracon  the  good  seruice  of  M"^  Flyut,  lately  U"  Fiynts  ex- 
one  of  the  magistrates,  and  being  informed  that  his  estate  is  much  diminished,  (.Qu^try  rates 
and  his  widdow  and  children  much  streightned,  doth  order  that  the  estate  of  the 
sajd  widdow,  during  hir  widdowhood,  shall  be  fi-eed  fr-om  payment  of  all  countiy 
rates,  leauing  the  toune  to  act  as  they  see  cawse  in  referenc  to  toune  rates. 


248 


THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1655. 

13  November. 
Ans'  to  M" 
Dells  peticon. 


CoiEittee  ab' 
Hampton  & 
Salisbury. 


[*214.] 

Order  ab'  Dan. 
Smith  &  Grace 
Porter. 


Ans'  to 
Edward  Rice 
his  peticon. 


Ans'  to  Edw. 

Bracks 

peticon. 


Couns  table 
oath  of  Hing- 
ham  to  be 
taken  by  Cap' 
Hubb'd. 
Ans'  to  Jane 
Hawkins 
petic. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Carre. 


In  ans'^  to  the  peticon  of  Abigail,  the  ■widdow  of  George  Dell,  itt  is  or- 
dered, that  the  sajd  widdow  shallbe  allowed  one  third  parte  of  what  howses  & 
lands  hir  sajd  husband  djed  possessed  of  during  hir  life,  and  also  one  third  part 
of  the  rest  of  his  estate  to  be  given  hir  for  euer,  and  the  rest  to  be  diuided  be- 
tweene  the  children,  shee  giving  in  securitje  to  the  County  Court  for  the  same 
according  to  lawe. 

Whereas  there  hath  binn  a  difference  betweene  Hampton  and  Salisbuiy 
about  running  the  Ijne  betwixt  them  according  to  the  retourne,  itt  is  therefore 
ordered,  that  M"'  W"  Pajne,  M'^  Edward  Woodman,  and  M"^  Mathew  Bojes 
are  appointed  a  coiuittee,  &  impowered  to  goe  on  y''  place  and  determine,  by 
way  of  explanation,  where  the  direct  Ijne  shall  runne  betweene  them ;  and 
what  shall  be  donne  by  them,  or  any  two  of  them,  retourned  vnder  theire 
hands  to  this  Court  in  May  next,  shall  be  a  finall  issue  betweene  them. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Daniell  Smith  shall  haue  his  liberty  at  the  next  Court 
of  Elections  to  bring  in  his  reasons  why  Grace  Porter  should  not  sell  the 
howse  and  land,  as  was  graunted  the  last  Court,  any  thing  in  that  order  not- 
withstanding, giving  the  sajd  Grace  Porter  notice  thereof  fower  dajes  before 
the  sajd  Court. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  Edmond  Rice,  of  Sudbuiy,  itt  is  ordered,  that 
M"'  Walter  Hejmes  &  Lefi  Goodenow  shall  and  hereby  is  appointed  a  comit- 
tee  to  vejw  the  land  menconed  in  the  peticon,  and  make  theire  report  haw 
they  finde  it  to  the  next  Court  of  Electjon. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  Breck,  of  Dorchester,  humbly  craving 
the  remittment  of  a  fine  the  law  imposeth  for  refusing  or  neglecting  to  serve 
in  y*  office  of  a  counstable,  &6,  the  Court  sees  no  cause  to  remitt  it. 

Capt  Joshua  Hubbard  and  the  other  two  comissioners  to  end  small 
cawses  are  hereby  impowered  to  take  the  counstables  of  Hinghams  oath  for 
this  yeare,  making  a  retourne  thereof  into  the  County  Court  at  Boston. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Jane  Hawkins  &  hir  sonns,  itt  is  ordered,  that 
the  sajd  Jane,  the  peticoner,  shall  haue  liberty  to  come  into  this  jurisdiccon  for 
two  moueths  to  transijort  hirself  to  England,  and  when  she  is  here,  if  she  giue 
sattisfaction  to  y"  County  Court  for  the  ofFenc  given  by  hir  to  the  Generall 
Court,  that  then  shee  shall  haue  hii-  liberty  to  line  &  remajne  heere. 

This  Court  doth  graunt  the  inheritance  of  Earn  Island  to  M''  George 
Carre  &  his  heires  for  euer. 


Courts  judge-  M'  Nowell,  and  wee  whose  names  are  heerevnto  subscribed,  being  mett 

inhabitants    ^^  Cambridg  vppon  the  Court  day,  the  inhabitants  of  Cambridge,  and  some 

of  Cambndg  &  fai-jngi-g  on  the  south  side  of  the  riuer,  being  come  together,  the  inhabitants 

y  farmers. 

of   the  toune  of   Cambridg  declared  themselves  vnwilling  to  enter  into  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  249 

debate  of  that  case  presented  to  the  Gennerall  Court  formerly  by  the  farmers      165  5. 

aforesajd  by  way  of  peticon,  because  M''  Eussell,  who  was  one  of  the  coinittee,    "       ''       "" 

1  1  1    c     1  tk  <•      1        •         •  •         1         •  13  November. 

was  absent ;  wherevppon  wee  left  the  case  w'^out  lurther  inquiring  therein. 

EDA¥:   JOHNSON, 
ELIAZ:   LUSHER. 

Major  Wlllard,  in  roome  of  M'  Nowell,  deceased,  and  Cap?  Clarke,  in  roome 
of  Capt  Johnson,  are  by  this  Court  appointed  to  joyne  w"^  M"'  Russell  «&:  Cap? 
Lusher,  pte  of  the  former  coinittee,  to  act  therein,  Majo'  Willard  to  appoint  the 
time  &  place  of  meeting,  &  make  theire  retourne  to  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

Vppon  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Charlestowne,  M'  Richard  Rus-  Comissioners 
sell,  Ralfe  IMouseall,  and  Thomas  Lynde  are  appointed  as  commissioners  to  ^^^gp^  ™* 
end  smale  cawses  there,  according  to  lawe.  Charles  Touue. 

*  Whereas  there  hath  binn  a  difference  betweene   Rowley  &  Newbury     [*215.] 
about  running  the  Ijne  betwixt  them,  according  to  graunts  from  Newbery,  itt  Comittee  to 

determine  the 

is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court,  w""  the  consent  of  the  deputy  of  Rowley,  ijne  bet.  New- 
and  Capt  Gerrish,  and  M"'  Woodman,  of  Newbury,  that  Deacon  AVhiple,  of  ,"'^''  °^' 
Ipswich,  M''  Hall,  of  Salisbury,  and  Ensigne  Hewlett  shall  be  a  coinittee,  who 
are  heereby  impowered  to  goe  on  the  place  and  vejw  the  same,  and  to  setle  & 
determine  where  the  Ijne  shall  runn  betwixt  them  ;  and  what  any  two  of  them 
shall,  vnder  theire  hands,  determine,  shall  be  a  finall  issue  betweene  them, 
making  retourne  thereof  to  the  next  Court  of  Election  to  be  recorded. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Lake  &  ptners,  M'  W""  Bartholmew,  Divicon  of 
M''  Sara  Wiiisly,  &  M""  Sam  Hall  are  heereby  appointed  &  impowred  by  this  "^'"1'^'^° 
Court  as  a  coiiiittee  to  goe  to  Swampscott  only  at  present,  &  according  to  the 
pattent  thereof,  &  the  order  of  this  Court,  made  18"»  May,  1653,  make  a 
just  divicon  thereof,  and  make  retourne  of  what  they  doe  to  the  Court  of 
Election  for  confirmation,  and  that  w*  hath  reference  to  Dover  is  respitted 
vntill  another  tjme. 

In  the  case  of  Thomas  Kemble  &  Tho  Jenner  ag'  Jn"  Pearce  for  taking  Courts  judKm< 
&  detayning  theire  vessell  &  goods,  w*  was  taken  at  Kinnibecke,  after  the  "  •'^"^'^^  ^ 
hearing  of  the   evidences,  the  Court  declares,  that  at  present  they  see   not 
cawse  to  determine  it,  but  referr  the  plaintlfFes  to  prosecu?  theire  rights  aii  in- 
terest before  his  highnes  the  Lord  Protector,  in  England,  by  way  of  com- 
plaint or  peticon,  as  they  shall  see  cawse. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Richard  Dexter  &  Job  Lane,  humbly  craving  Dexter  & 

the   remittment   of  the   forfeitures   of  theire   scucrall   bonds  of  five  pounds  ^^^f  =  S"®' 

'■  remitted  to  40». 

apeece  for  that  they  brought  not  Alice  Muzzcy  before  the  last  County  Court 
to  answer  the  seuerall  things  that  were  lajd  against  hir,  they  having  attended 
VOL.   IV.  —  r.vRT  I.  32 


250 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Capt.  Norton, 
capt.  to  y 
millitary 
compa  at 
Charls  Toune. 


[*216.] 

Courts  ans'  to 
M'  Cleves,  &v, 
remonstrance. 


that  Court,  &  not  being  then  called,  went  home,  not  out  of  any  wilfull  neglect 
of  theire  duty,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  peticoners  shall  haue  all  theire  seuerall 
fines  remitted  to  twenty  shillings  apeece,  provided  the  peticoners  bring  the 
id  Alice  before  the  GoQno''  or  Dep  GoQner  w"'in  sixe  dayes. 

In  ans""  to  the  request  of  the  millitary  company  at  Charles  Toune,  Cap? 
Frauncis  Norton  is  allowed,  and  by  this  Court  confirmed,  as  theire  captaine. 

In  ans"^  to  the  propposicbns  presented  to  this  Court  by  M"^  George  Cleaves, 
implojed  by  seuerall  inhabitants  of  the  northerne  parts  of  our  pat  tent,  pretended 
by  them  to  be  the  province  of  Lj-gonia,  the  Court,  having  considered  &  com- 
pared the  patents  produced  by  M'  Cleves  with  our  oune,  doe  finde  ours  to 
haue  the  precedency,  and  so  consequently  the  lands  in  dispute  to  be  our  prop- 
per  right  by  pattent,  lying  &  being  scittuate  within  three  miles  to  the  north- 
ward of  the  most  northerly  part  of  ISIcrremacke  lliuer,  the  bounds  graunted 
vs  by  pattent,  as  may  appeare  by  the  originall,  a  coppy  whereof  wee  haue 
deliuered,  according  to  the  desires  of  the  sajd  inhabitants,  to  iP  Cleves,  to- 
gether with  the  testimonjes  of  the  survcjor  of  the  most  northerly  part  of 
Merremacke,  and  also  of  those  that  observed  the  parrallel  lattitude  vpou  the 
sea  cost  in  or  ncare  vnto  the  Bay  of  Casco,  the  search  whereof,  though  de- 
ferred for  some  yeares,  cannot  prejudice  our  right  when  knoune,  nor  strength- 
en the  title  of  others,  becawse  wee  did  not  in  particcular  challenge  the  vtmost 
of  our  bounds,  which  wee  could  not  in  modesty  doe  till  wee  had  thereof  some 
assurance,  though  our  gcnnerall  clajm  hath  binn  constantly  from  the  first 
to  three  miles  northward  of  the  most  northerly  part  of  the  sajd  riuer  in 
length  &  longitude,  thro  the  majne  land  from  the  easterne  sea  to  the  sea  on 
the  west ;  and  therefore  all  graunts,  orders,  or  combinations  to,  concerning,  or 
of  any  persons  within  the  sajd  limitts,  are  invallid,  null,  &  of  no  force  or 
obligation  vppon  the  consciences  of  any,  nor  is  there  any  feare  of  imputation 
to  any  vppon  that  account.  How  fairely  wee  haue  demeaned  ourselves  to  all 
our  neighbo''^  in  all  our  references  &  concernments,  wee  leaue  to  them  to 
testify  as  they  see  cawse.  *How  since  wee  haue  knoune  our  Ijmitts  ^yee  haue 
civilly  and  freindly  ordered  oiu*  right  to  the  inhabitants  of  those  parts,  hath 
binn  to  theire  consent  &  approbation,  neither  was  threatning  euer  objected  to 
vs  till  now,  too  soone  because  too  vnjustly  vppon  those  that  are  innocent : 
wee  haue  and  doe  modestly  demauud  our  right,  and  cannot  accept  of  a  denjall 
from  those  that  ought  to  yeild  it,  nor  consent  to  any  forbearance  thereof, 
becawse  wee  haue  no  doubt  therein,  and  finde  that  thereby  wee  doe  but  furnish 
others  to  object  against  vs.  Wee  haue  not  endeavored  to  infringe  the  liber- 
tjes  of  the  planters  of  those  lands,  but  haue  offered  them  the  same  with  our- 
selves, nor  to  enrich  or  case  ourselves  by  taxing  theire  estates  ;  wee  expect 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY  IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  251 

no  more  thea  what  they  formerly  did,  viz.,  beare  theire  ounc  charges  ;  nor  doe  1  G  5  5. 
wee  sceke  to  put  vppoii  them  that  which  wee  oiu'selvcs  woukl  couut  vna^quall,  ^^^^^^ 
viz.,  to  subject  to  such  hxwcs  and  constitutions  made  by  others  without  theire 
consent,  it  being  the  portion  of  most  of  oiu-  present  inhabitants,  as  of  the  sub- 
jects of  most  countrjes,  to  be  in  no  other  capacitje,  the  constitutions  of  gouern- 
ment  &  new  moddell  of  lawes  not  being  made  in  euery  age  of  men,  or  vppon 
the  arrivall  of  new  coiners  to  a  colony.  If  therefore  the  sd  inhabitants  shall 
endeavor  to  prevent  vs  in  our  just  rights,  wee  must  protest  against  theire  pro- 
ceedings as  vnjust,  and  shall  ad\ise  ourselves  to  take  such  course  as  shall 
evidenc  our  desires  to  acquitt  ourselves  honestly  before  God  &  men. 

This  Court  voted  an  ans'  to  the  Dutch  goQno"  letter,  w'^''  is  in  the  booke 

of  records  for  letters. 

Ttt  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary  shall  write  a  letter  to  M'  Hopkins  in  the  Secret,  to 

*i,u  J.O  WJL  3  ^  -r-k  /-i    n  Tvnte  a  letter 

name  of  this  Court,  &  send  the  same  to  him,  so  as  the  Goano-^  &  Dep^y  GoUno'  to  M' Hopkins. 

approove  thereof 

The  Court  also  voted  a  letter  to  be  sent  to  his  highnes  the  Lord  Pro-  ^leuer^toy. 
tector  of  the  coiuonwealth  of  England,  &5,  w^"  is  i^  the  booke  of  reccords  for 
letters,  w""  y*  Courts  instruccons  to  Cap?  Leueret. 

Ttt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  .In°  Leueret  shall  &  heereby  is  desired  &  im-  Capt.  Leueret 

J  .  to  act  for  TS 

poured,  according  to  instruccons  given  him,  to  appeare  ior  vs  and  act  m  our  ^^^^^^  ^^^ 
behalfe'in  all  matters  of  concernment  to  vs,  before  the  Lord  Protector  and  his  Protector,  &c. 
honnorable  councill  in  England. 

Ttt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  Jn"  Cromwell,  for  trading  a  gal-  Courts  sen- 
Ion  of  strong  waters,  almost  half  a  pound  of  pouder,  &  a  tenn  pounds  ot  shott,  cromwell. 
shall  pay  to  the  Tresurer,  as   a  fine  to  the  countrje,  the    soiSe  of  twelve 
pounds,  and  that  Jn"  Tincker  should  pay  tenn  shillings  for  selHng  now  &  then 
a  gill  of  strong  waters  to  y*  Indians. 

Itt  was  voted,  that  Ensisne  Wheeler  &  Thomas  Hincksman  shallbe  al-  Ensigne 

.  .  Wheelers  & 

lowed  out  of  Cromwells  fine  three  pounds  for  theire  pames.  Hincksmans 

The  Court,  on  a  full  hearing  of  the  case  of  Thomas  Warner  in  reference  ^^^^^J^^^'^^^^, 
to  his  suff"ering  by  imprisonment  for  suspition  of  murder,  doe  judg  meete  to  i„  wamers 
order,  that  he  be  allowed  five  pounds  out  of  the  coiuon  tresury,  and  referr  "»"*• 
him  to  make  his  full  reparation  on  Tho  Pvedding,  y'  accused  him. 

*Thc  Court,  further  proceeding  in  the  hearing  &  examining  the  evidences      [*217.] 
in  the  case  of  M'  Jn°  Gifford  and  the  vndertakers  of  the  iron  works  in  refer-  ^^^^^^^^fj^, 
enc  to  the  accSa  of  revejw,  past  these  seuerall  votes  :  —  ".  i5:9mo.65- 

1.  Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  something  shall  be  abated  of 
the  Courts  judgment,  in  Xoucmber,  16-54,  in  M--  Giffords  case. 

2.  That  one  hundred  thirty  eight  pounds  sixteene  shillings  and  eight 


252 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


13  November. 


165  5.      penc  shall  be  abated  out  of  that  judgment,  Noueniber,  1654,  w*  in  the  fewer 
papers  appeared  to  be  miscast. 

3.  It  being  put  to  the  quajstion,  whither  the  plaintifFe  hath  made  any 
due  prooffe  of  more  disbursments,  according  to  his  orders  and  instruccbns 
contejned  in  the  fower  papers,  then  the  two  thousand  five  hundred  pounds 
allowed  him  in  the  former  judgment,  the  sallery  not  being  considered  in  this 
vote,  it  was  resolved  by  the  whole  Court  on  the  negative. 

Itt  was  put  to  the  quaestion,  whither  auy  more  of  the  judgment  which 
lyes  against  M"^  John  Gyfford  should  be  abated  or  no,  then  that  w*  hath 
already  binn  deducted  vppon  a  mistake,  and  particularly  his  sallery  for  two 
yeares  thi-ee  quarters  &  something  more.  It  was  resolved  on  the  affirmative 
by  the  whole  Court. 

Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  mett  together,  that  M"^  Gyfford  should 
be  abated  three  hundred  pounds  out  of  the  judgment  of  the  last  Court  in 
Nouember,  1654,  in  referenc  to  the  fower  papers. 

M''  Symonds,   Capt  Johnson,   &    Left    Clap    are   appointed  a  comittee 
cosT'"^ '''"  "^  to  examine  the  bill  of  costs  produced  by  Capt  Keajne  &  M-^  Gifford,  and 
retourne  thelre  thoughts  to  this  Court ;  w'^''  was  donne  accordingly. 

M''  Robt  Howard,  being  put  into  the  publicke  notarys  place  by  the 
County  Court,  is  approoved  of  by  this  Coiu-t. 

"Whereas  at  the  Geunerall  Court  in  Nouember  last,  in  the  case  depending 
betwixt  M"'  Josiah  Winslow  &  Capt  Robert  Keajne,  deputjes  &  attourneyes  for 
the  vndertakers  of  the  iron  workes,  &  M'  John  Gifford,  late  agent  for  the  sajd 
vndertakers,  the  Court  gaue  judgment  for  the  plaintiffs  to  the  value  of  eigh- 
teene  hundred  ninety  sixe  pounds  sixe  shillings  &  eleven  penc,  as  by  the 
sajd  judgment,  compared  with  the  ffoote  of  the  last  audit  in  the  sajd  case, 
(which  the  judgment  referred  vnto,)  may  appeare,  as  also  adjudged  the 
defendant  to  pay  the  workemens  wages,  or  give  secimtje  for  the  same,  leaving, 
notwithstanding,  the  sajd  defendant  to  his  liberty  to  make  due  proofe  of  any 
further  disbursments  (according  to  his  orders  and  instructions)  for  the  abate- 
ment of  the  sajd  judgment  or  any  part  thereof;  and  whereas  the  sajd  Gifford 
hath,  according  to  lawe  and  by  permission  of  this  Court,  ^ferrd  a  bill  of  re- 
vejw  for  the  further  clearing  of  his  accompts  and  disbursements  for  the  sajd 
vndertakers,  though  the  Court  sawe  sufficijent  cawse  not  to  accept  of  his  oune 
oath  for  the  prooving  of  his  whole  accounts,  yet  vppon  a  full  hearing  and  ex- 
aminacon  of  such  pleas  and  other  new  evidences  as  he  hath  now  presented, 
this  Court  hath  adjudged,  that  the  sajd  Gifford  shall  haue  allowed  him,  by 
way  of  abatement,  out  of  the  former  judgment,  the  soiSe  of  three  hundred 
pounds ;    and  for   two   yeares    &    tliree    quarters    sallery,  the   soiHe  of  two 


Comittee  to 


M'  Howard, 
publ.  notary. 

Courts  judg- 
ment in  Mf 
Giffords  case. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  253 

hundred  and  twenty  pounds ;  and  for  errors  miscast  by  the  auditors  in  some      1655. 
of  the  fower  papers,  vppon  which  part  of  the  former  judgment  was  grounded,    ^"     '       ^ 

,  ,  13  November 

the    soine  of   one   hundred    thirty  eight   pounds   sixtecne  shilUngs   &  eight 

penc ;  all  which  soiiies  being  deducted  out  of  the  former  judgment,  w""  the 

costs  of  this   Court,  amounting  to  the  some  of  ninety  three  pounds  twelve 

shiUings  fewer  penc,  the  former  judgment  in  rcferenc  to  workemens  wages, 

and  the  remajnder  stands  good  against  him,  together  w""  costs  of  the  former 

suite  now  graunted  to   the   vndertakers   by   this   Court,  being  *eighty  two      [*218.J 

pounds  one  shilling  &  two  penc,  in  all  twelue  hundred  twenty  five  pounds 

nineteene  shillings  one   penny,  and  the  debts  on  accompt  to  belong  to  ISI'^ 

Gifford. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Cap?  Hauthorne  shall  pay,  or  cawse  to  be  pajd,  the  Capt.  Hau- 

,  .,,.  o       •  T     r^    T>    ;v     thornetopay 

some  of  nineteene  pounds  thirteene  shilinigs  &  sixe  penc  to  i^ett  ltot)t  ig  13  g  ^g 
Turnor,  for  the  charges  of  the  magis*s,  expended  in  the  Courts  hearing  of  M'  ^^"-  Tumor. 
Gyffords  case,  this  and  the  last  session,  according  to  his  engagement. 

This  Court,  finding  some  inconveniencjes  in  collecting  of  the  countrje  rate  Ab«  y  countrje 
at  this  tjme  of  the  yeare,  in  regard  of  Indian  corne  is  not  merchantable,  doe 
order,  that  whosoeuer  shall  remove  from  one  plantacon  to  another,  or  out  of  the 
countrje,  betwixt  this  and  the  tenth  of  the  first  moneth,  shall  not  haue  libertje 
to  make  payment  of  theire  sajd  rate  in  Indian  corne,  but  shall  make  sattisfac- 
tion,  according  to  lawe,  some  other  way,  when  they  shall  be  required  there- 
vuto.  This  order  to  continue  vntil  this  Coiut  meete  againe  to  take  further 
order  heerein. 

In  ans"'  to  the  petiGSn  of  Majo'  Willard,  Rot)t  Merrjam,  in  the  name  of  Ans'to  Con- 

.  1       •        J-  cord  peticon  to 

diflse  others  of  the  toune   of  Concord,  desiring  libertje  and  authority  Irom  sell  or  phi" 
this  Court  to  sell  the  house  &  land  of  Frauncis  Barker,  lately  deceased,  for  ''""^'• 
the  best  advantage  of  his  children,  the  house  being  much  out  of  repajre,  & 
the  land  to  inconsiderable  to  defray  the  charges  of  repaire,  the  Court  graunts 
theire  request. 

Thomas  "Warner  acknowledged  before  the  whole  Courte,  mett  together,  Warners  ac- 

1    T^  /-i    r^         ■  •        lU      knowledgm'. 

that  he  had  wrongfully  charged  the  honnored  Deputy  Ooano'^  m   saying  the 

letter  he  had  produced  was  not  the  letter  he  coiiiitted  him  to   prison  by,  for 

which  he  was  sorry.    The  Court  accepted  his  acknowledgment. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Tresurer  shall  sattisfy  the  magis''  ferriage  for  Ma-is"  to  pay 

■   c     r       ^^     ■  a-       ■  ferriage,  &c. 

tjme  past,  they  being  for  tjmc  to  come  to  sattisfy  for  theire  oune  tternages. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  it  shall  be  left  to  the  Gouernor,  Dep*  Gofln',  Cap?  Coisittee  ab' 

'  .      .  ^  Capt.  LeQ's 

Wiggin,  Cap?  Sauage,  &  Capt  Clarke  to  shew  Capt  Leueret  his  instruccons  ;  uistrucEons. 
and  if  anything  is  to  be  altered,  it  is  referred  to  them  to  make  a  supply. 

Itt  is  desired,  that  the  depu'^  of  each  toune  coiTiend  the  condicon  of  M--  Ab'M-Nowell 


254 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1655. 

13  November. 

Bayle  to  be 
taken  for  M' 
Gifford. 


Secretary  to 
d*  M'  Giffords 
books. 


M'  Chauncey 
to  preach  y« 
election  ser- 
mon. 


Nowells  family  to  tlieire  seuerall  tounes,  in  referenc  to  some    meete  recom 
pence  for  the  sajd  M'^  Nowells  service,  by  way  of  rate  or  otherwise,  bringing 
theire  retournes  to  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

It  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  then  mett  together,  that  the  GoQno', 
Majo"^  Atherton,  and  the  Tresurer  shall  take  sufficyent  bajle  for  M'  Gyffords 
being  a  true  prisoner  to  this  Court  till  the  Gennerall  Court  of  Election  next, 
when  he  is  to  retourne  to  prison  the  first  day  thereof,  this  bond  to  be  given 
to  the  Tresurer  for  y*  vse  of  y*  countrje. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary  and  auditor  shall  forthwith^  take  the 
foote  of  euery  page  in  all  M''  Giffords  bookes  now  in  the  secretarys  hand,  which, 
Avhen  that  is  donne,  shall  be  deliuered  to  M'  Gifford,  the  booke  of  bills  ex- 
cepted, which  also  shall,  w*Mn  one  moneth,  be  deliuered  him,  this  to  be  donne 
w"'  as  much  speede  as  may  be. 

M'^  Charles  Chauncey,  praesident  of  Harvard  CoUedg,  is  desired  to 
preach  before  the  Gennerall  Court  on  the  next  election  day. 


1656.     *Att  a  Gennerall  Courte  of  Electjon,  held  at  Boston,  on  y  14<^  of 

May,  1656. 


14  May. 

[*219.] 


JN°  ENDECOTT,  Es^i,  was  chosen  Goiino'-  for  this  yeare,  &  tooke  his 
oath  in  open  Court. 
Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep'  GoQa',    &  tooke  his  oath  in 
open  Court. 

M'  Symon  Bradstreet, 
M"'  Samuel  Symonds, 
Capt  Rofet  Bridges, 
Capt  Tho  Wiggin, 
Capt  Danlell  Gookin, 
Majo''  Dan  Deunison, 
Majo"'  Symon  AVillard, 
Majo'' Humphrey  Atherton,  j 


were  chosen  Assistants,  &  tooke  theire  oathes. 
was  chosen  IMajor  Gennerall.  * 


Edward  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretary. 

M''  Richard  Russell  was  chosen  Tresurer. 

M''  Symon  Bradstreet,  1  were   chosen  Comissioners  for  the  Vnited  Col- 
Majo''  Dan  Denuison,    J  lonjes. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  255 

Majo'  Atlierton,     1  1656. 

■«,r  •  r  TT     a  r  in  reserve.  > 

Majo'  HauthornCjJ  v ' 

U  May. 

The  names  of  such  as  were  retourned  from  the  seuerall  tounes  to  serve 
at  this  Gennerall  Court  as  Deputjes  were  as  ffoUoweth :  — 

Salem  :  Majo''  "W"""  Hauthorne. 

Charlestowne  :  M"'  Eich  Russell,  Ralph  Mowsall. 

Dorchester :  Left  Roger  Clap,  W  John  Wisewall. 

Boston :   Capt  Tho  Savage,  Capt  Tho  Clarke. 

Roxbury :  M"'  John  Johnson,  M"^  Philip  Eliot. 

"Watertoune  :  M''  Ephrajm  Child. 

Linne  :  M'^  Thomas  Layton. 

Cambridg :  M"^  Edw  Jackson,  M'"  Edw  Collins. 

Ipswich :  M""  W"  Hubbard,  Left  Jn°  Apleton. 

Newbury :  W""  Titcombe. 

Weimouth :  Tho  Dyer. 

Hingham :  Capt  Joshua  Hubbard,  John  Levitt. 

Concord :  M'  Rofet  Merjam. 

Dedham  :   Capt  Eliazer  Lusher. 

Salisbury  :  IM--  Tho  Bradbury. 

Hampton :  Henry  Dow. 

Rowley :  Maximillian  Jewett. 

Braintry  :  JI"'  Peter  Bracket. 

Doner :  Capt  Richard  Walderne. 

Woobourne :  Capt  Edw  Johnson. 

Maiden :  M"^  Joseph  Hills. 

Kittery  :  M'  Tho  Withers. 

Yorke  :  M'  Edw  Rlshworth. 

Springfeild  :  M'^  Elitzur  Holjoke. 

M''  Rich  Russell  was  chosen  Speaker  for  y^  session. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  from  hence-  3  comissionera 

/•.I  c    ^         ^  •     •  /.,.  T  .,  pou' to  marry, 

torth  any  one  ot  the  three  commissioners  lor  ending  smale  cawses  in  the  seuer-  &£. 
all  tounes  where  no  magistrate  dwells,  shall  &  hereby  are  authorized  &  impowred 
to  solemnize  marriage  betweene  partjes  legally  published,  provided  two  of  the 
sajd  comissioners  be  present  j  and  all  other, coiiiisslons  in  this  case  are  heereby 

made  void.  Horses  not  to 

•*  be  sold  to 

Whereas  this  Court,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  haue  binu  careful!  to  restreijne  Indjanson 

11  /.     _     .  poenalty  of 

the  abuse  of  amnition  &  other  things  of  like  nature  from  the  ludjaus,  -whereby  lOO". 


256  •    THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1  056.  they  may  cTisturbe  our  peace  and  safety,  it  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court, 
that  no  person,  on  any  pretence  whatsoeuer,  shall  sell  or  any  wajes  dispose 
any  horse,  mare,  or  colt  to  any  Indjan,  on  pcenalty  of  a  hundred  pounds  ;  and 
that  this  lawe  shall  be  of  force,  provided  each  of  the  Vnited  Colonjes  shall 
establish  lawes  to  restreijne  theire  inhabitants  on  like  poenaltjes. 
[*220.]  *This  Court,  taking  into  serjous  consideration  the  present  streights  &  ne- 

cessitjes  that  lye  vppon  the  countrje  in  respect  of  cloathing,  which  is  not  like 
to  be  so  plentifully  suppljed  from  forraigne  parts  as  in  tjmes  past,  &  not  know- 
ing any  better  way  &  meanes  conduceable  to  our  subsistance  then  the  improov- 
ing  of  as  many  hands  as  may  be  in  spining  woole,  cotton,  flaxe,  &S,  — 

Itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  all 
hands  not  necessarily  implojde  on  other  occasions,  as  weomen,  girles,  &  boyes, 
shall  and  heereby  are  enjoyned  to  spinn  according  to  theire  skills  &  abillitje  ; 
and  that  the  selectmen  in  euery  toune  doe  consider  the  condicon  &  capacitje 
of  euery  family,  and  accordingly  to  assesse  them  at  one  or  more  spinners;  «& 
because  seuerall  family es  are  necessarily  implojd  the  greatest  part  of  theii-e 
tjme  in  other  buisnes,  yet,  if  opportuuitjes  were  attended,  sometjme  might 
Order  rcquir-  be  spared  at  lai-ge  by  some  of  them  for  this  worke,  the  sajd  selectmen  shall 
ingy  im-         therefore  assess  such  familyes  at  half  or  a  quarter  of  a  spinner,  accordina;  to 

proovement  of  •'  i  ±^  ?  G 

all  hands  in      theire  capacitjes  ;  secondly,  that  euery  one  thus  assessed  for  a  whole   spiner 

6pinning,  &c. 

4.  doe,  after  this  present  yeare,  1656,  spinn,  for  thirty  weekes  euery  yeare,  three 

pounds  p  weeke  of  lining,  cotton,  or  woollen,  &  so  proportionably  for  half  or 
quarter  spinners,  vnder  the  poenaltje  of  twelve  pence  for  euery  pound  short ; 
and  the  selectmen  shall  take  speciall  care  for  the  execution  of  this  order,  which 
may  easily  be  effected  by  deviding  theire  seuerall  tounes  into  tenn,  six,  five, 
and  to  appoint  one  of  the  tenn,  six,  or  five  to  take  an  account  of  theire  di- 
vicon,  and  to  certify  the  selectmen  if  any  are  defective  in  what  they  are 
assessed,  who  shall  improove  the  aforesajd  poenaltjes  imposed  vpon  such  as 
are  negligent,  for  the  encouragement  of  those  that  are  diligent  in  theire  la- 
bour. And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  the  selectmen  in  all  tounes  within 
this  jurisdiccon  shall  haue  power  to  make  such  orders  in  theire  respective 
tounes  for  the  clearing  of  coinons  for  keeping  of  sheepe,  as  also  for  the  time  of 
putting  rams  to  theire  flocks,  as  they  shall  judge  meete.  And  the  deputjes 
of  the  seuerall  tounes  are  hereby  required  to  impart  the  minde  of  the  Court, 
for  the  saving  of  y"'  seede  of  hemp  &  flax. 
Orders  in  ^^  ^^  Ordered  by  this  Court  and  authoritje  thereof,  that  it  shall  be  in  the 

refercne  to  y«    po^ygj.   of  guery  County  Court  to  make  vse  of  such  prison  as  is  at  i)resent 

house  of  cor-      •■  •/  -i  i  i 

rection.  erected  in  theire  county  for  a  howse  of  correction,  till  the  howses  of  cor- 

rection be  finished;  also,  to  appointe  &  authorize  the  keeper,  or  some  other 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  257 


14  May. 


meete  person,  to  be  master  of  that  howse,  as  they  shall  thinke  good.     3.  That      16  56. 

the  selectmen  of  the  toune,  where  such  howse  is  appointed,  shall  haue  liberty 

&  power  to  procure,  in  a  voluntary  &  prudent  way,  some  competent  stocke  of 

hemp  &  flax,  or  other  materialls,  &,  vj)pon  account,  to  comitt  the  same  into 

the  hands  of  the  master  of  the  howse,  to  be  implojed  at  his  discretion  by  the 

labo'^  of  such  delinquents  as  shall  from  tjme  to  time  be  coiiiitted  vnto  him 

from  authoritje.     That  the  stock  being  in  value  or  kinde,  preserved  to  such  as 

put  in  the  same,  &  all  the  bennefit   attajned  by  the   labor   of  the   persons 

coiiiitted  shallbe  to  the  vse  of  the  master,  allowing  only  so  much  as  will  kcepe 

the  delinquent  with  necessary  bread  &  water,  or  other  meane  foode^ut  of  the 

same,  as  fewer  penc  out  of  the  shilling  earned  by  his  or  her  labor.     Tliat  at 

the  first  coming  into  the  howse,  the  master  of  the  correction  howse  himself, 

or  whom  he  shall  procure,  or  in  Avant  of  a  fitt  person,  the  coiuon  corcctor,  in 

allowance  by  the  Court,  residing  in  the  toune,  shall  whip  the  delinquent  not 

exceeding  tenn  stripes,  and  after  that  he  shall  imploy  him  or  her  by  dayly 

stint ;  and  if  he  or  shee  be  stubborne,  disorderly,  or  idle,  and  not  performe 

theire  taske,  and  that  in  good  condicon,  it  shall  be  in  the  masters  power  to 

abridg  them  of  part  of  theire  vsuall  food,  or  give  them  meete  correction,  as 

the  case  shall  requier  from  time  to  tjme ;  &  it  shallbe  in  the  power  of  one 

magistrate  to  comitt  idle  persons,  or  stubborne  persons  against  them  that  haue 

authoritje  ouer  them,  runnaways,  coiiion  diunkards,  pilferers,  *coiiion  night      P221.] 

walkers,  and  wanton  persons,  as  tending  to  vncleanes  in  speeches  or  actions 

and  the  like ;    and   it   shall  not  be  in  the   power  of    the  master  to  deliuer 

out  of  prison  vnless  he  hath  a   discharg  or  warrant  vnder    the    hand  of   a 

magistrate ;  and  if  the  delinquent  be  coinitted  by  the  Court,  not  to  be  deliu- 

ered  but  by  order  of  the  Court,  or  vnder  the  hands  of  the  greater  part  of  the 

members   of  the   Court  betweene   Courts.     And  euery  County  Court  where 

such  howse  is  in  being  aie  desired  to  consider  &  propound  to  this  Coui-t,  either 

for  the  bennefit  of  the  master  or  of  the  implojment  in  tliis  howse,  what  may 

incourage  or  further  the  same.     This  order  not  to  be  in  force  after  one  yeare. 

For  the  better  ordering  &  selling  of  seuerall  cases  concerning  the  mill-  Miiutary 

•    1  1-1  •  i-  1   order3. 

tary  companyes  w^'in   this  junsdiccon,  which,  vppon    experjenc,   are   found  4_ 

either  wanting  or  inconvenient,  it  is  ordered  and  declared  by  this  Court  &  the 
authoritje  thereof,  that  henceforth  no  negroes  or  Indjans,  although  servants  to 
the  English,  shall  be  armed  or  permitted  to  trajne,  and  that  no  other  person 
shallbe  exempted  from  trayning  but  such  as  some  law  doth  priviledg,  or  some 
of  the  County  Courts  or  Courts  of  Asistants,  after  notice  of  the  partjes 
desires  to  the  ofilcers  of  each  companye  to  which  they  belong,  vpon  just 
cawse,  shall  dismisse.  2.  And  it  is  further  ordered  and  declared  to  be  the 
VOL.   IV.  PART  I.  33 


258  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


14  May. 


1656.  minde  of  this  Court,  in  election  of  millitary  officers,  that  henceforth  none  but 
howseholders,  free  men,  &  such  as  are  already  listed,  having  taken  the  oath  of 
fidelitje  before  the  date  hereof,  shall  haue  liberty  of  vote.  And  whereas  this 
Court  hath  made  seuerall  orders  concerning  the  precedencjes  of  captaines  and 
theire  companjes,  none  of  which  sajd  orders  doth  reach  the  case  of  the  fower 
companjes  of  Boston,  being  of  aequall  standing,  this  C'oiurt  doth  therefore 
order,  in  reference  to  them,  that  theire  precedency  shallbe  for  the  present,  & 
from  tjme  to  tjme  heereafter,  according  to  the  prioritje  of  theu'e  comissions. 
4.  It  ia  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  no  troope  within  this  jurisdiction  shall 
exceede  ^e  noumber  of  seventy  listed  souldjers,  who  shall  all  be  furnished 
according  as  the  lawes  doe  provide ;  and  it  is  expected  that  the  capl  of  the 
sajd  troopes  respectively,  &  the  majors  of  the  regiments,  &  majo''  gennerall 
doe,  in  theire  respective  charges,  take  care  that  the  orders  concerning  troopers 
be  duly  executed;  &  becawse  some  troopers,  living  remote,  doe  often  avojd 
the  poenaltjes  of  the  lawes,  by  reason  of  the  intollerable  burden  put  vpon 
the  clarkes  to  demaund  &  levy  the  same,  it  is  therefore  heereby  ordered,  that 
the  clarkes  of  the  troopes,  for  theire  charges  &  travajle  in  levying  of  all 
fines,  shallbe  allowed  the  fees  of  the  marshall,  to  be  by  him  levyed  &  dis- 
trejned,  together  w""  the  fines,  provided  no  distresse  be  made  w*in  one  month 
after  the  ofFenc,  that  the  partjes  may  haue  libertje  to  plead  theire  excuses  to 
the  officers.  And  it  is  fiuther  ordered,  that  no  trooper  shallbe  draune  out  of 
the  county  by  the  captaines  &  officers  thereof  vppon  any  occasion  or  pretence 
whatsoeuer,  nor  for  exercise  only,  or  at  the  regementall  meetings,  but  by 
order  from  the  majo'  gennerall,  &  by  his  coiuaund ;  and  for  explanation  of  that 
pticcular  in  the  lawe  respecting  troopers,  made  in  the  3''^  mo:  48,  for  free 
coiiionage  for  theire  horse  in  any  of  the  toune  coiiions  where  they  inhabit,  it 
is  declai-ed  by  this  Court,  that  it  is  not,  nor  shallbe,  vnderstood  or  intended  of 
such  coinons  as  are  appropriated  to  particcular  persons,  vnlesse  it  be  in  time  of 
excercise  only,  provided  that  such  appropriated  coinons  be  valued  and  rated  in 
the  annuall  assessment,  as  all  other  reall  &  persouall  estate  is  or  by  lawe  ought 
to  be  donne.  And  for  the  more  constant  supply  of  a  comon  stocke  of  pouder 
and  aiiiunition,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  survejor  gennerall  shall  yearely  give 
an  account  to  the  councill  of  the  sajd  stocke,  that  accordingly  the  Gennerall 
Court,  being  by  them  informed,  may,  out  of  the  f)ubUcke  treasure,  make  a 
contract  supply  according  to  the  neede  of  the  countrje. 
Hen.  Nortons  Itt  is  ordered,  y'  y'  fower  pounds  thirteeue  shillings  &  fower  penc  or- 

dered &  allowed  by  y*  County  Court  at  Yorke  for  Henry  Norton  for  his 
journeys  to  y"  eastward  on  y"^  Gen)"  Courts  occasions  be  speedily  pajd  him 
by  the  Tresurer  of  the  coimtrye. 


recompenCi 
4.  13.  4. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  259 

*Vpon  observacSn  of  some  inconvenjences,  and  for  easing  the  countrje      165G. 
respecting  the  choice  of  county  Trcsurers,  it  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  ^ 

•     rr"  ^^  May. 

the  authoritjc  thereof,  that  after  this  present  yeare  the  chojce  of  countje  Tres-      nooo  i 
urers  in  each  toune  shall  be  made  vppon  the  day  of  theire  giving  in  of  votes  c^y^^jg 
for  magistrates,  and  sent  by  the  same  person  to  theire  shire  meeting,  and  there  Tresurers, 

^  when  chosen. 

be  opened  and  signified  to  the  seuerall  tonnes  who  is  chosen,  any  thing  in  any 
former  hnv  notw"'standing,  nor  shall  any  clarke  or  recorder  of  any  Countje 
Court  be  chosen  Tresurer  for  the  countje. 

Forasmuch  as  the  tounes  of  Spriiigfeild  and  North  Hampton  ape  so  re-  Sprfngfeild  & 

,-,,.  ,  .  •11  North  Hamp- 

mote  that  the  iresurcr  cannot  send  tortn  his  warrants  to  them,  as  la  provided  t^^  ,„  berated 
by  the  lawc.  Charges  Publick,  page  y=  9">,  it  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court  "^  """'"■'•  *^- 
and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  connstables  of  tfee  sajd  tounes,  from  tjme 
to  tjme,  shall  call  together  theire  inhabitants  in  each  toune,  who  shall  assesse 
theire  inhabitants  and  pay  in  the  same  according  to  lawc,  vnlcsse  at  such  time 
or  tjmes  as  the  Tresurer  shall  send  them  warrants,  as  the  former  lawc  pro- 
vides, then  to  make  theire  assessment  accordingly. 

This  Court  taking  into  consideration  the  vncertajntje  of  procuring  salt  M'Winthrops 

,,,,,.,,  graunt  to  make 

amongst  vs  lor  our  necessary  vses,  and  what  salt  liatli  binn  or  late  gotten  g^it. 
bath  binn  at  very  deare  rates,  and  whereas  INI''  John  Winthrop  proffereth  to 
make  salt  for  the  colonje  after  a  new  way,  neuer  before  devised  or  practised, 
&  desireth  that  none  other  may  make  salt  w'l'in  this  jurisdiccon  for  the  space 
of  twenty  one  yeares  after  his  manner,  which  none  before  hath  knoune  or 
vsed,  and  that  he  may  haue  that  priviledg  graunted  him  by  this  Court,  this 
Gennerall  Court  therefore  doth  heereby  graunt  vuto  the  sajd  INI"'  John  "Win- 
throp the  priviledg  of  making  salt  after  his  new  way  w*''in  this  jurisdiccon, 
and  that  none  other  during  the  sajd  terme  shall  make  salt  after  his  manner 
w"'out  the  sajd  M'"s  Winthrops  speciall  license. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  W"  Clements,  craving  a  divorce  from  his  Ans'  to  W" 
wife,  who  for  seuerall  yeares  hath  refused  marriage  fellowship  w"^  him,  the  5o„°"^ 
Court  referrs  the  hearing  and  determining  of  the  case  vnto  the  County  Court 
of  Charlestoune  next  month. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  the  execcuto'  &  ouerseers  of  the  last  will  of  DiWcon  of 
Barnabas  Fewer,  late  of  Boston,  deceased,  desii'iug  that  this  Court  would  pawers  estate. 
please  to  graunt  that  there  may  be  a  divicon  of  the  estate  w"^*"  the  sajd  testator 
left  to  his  Sonne  Eliazer  &  his  wife,  that  the  howse  prized  at  one  hundred 
and  eighty  pounds  may  be  estated  on  the  sonne,  Eliazer,  and  the  other  howse, 
prized  at  fforty  pounds,  may  be  estated  vppon  John  Johnson,  husband  of  the 
sajd  Grace  Fewer,  the  late  wife  of  the  aforesajd  Barnabas  Fewer,  deceased, 
and  that  the  rest  of  the  estate  may  be  aequally  devided,  so  as  to  make  the  two 


260 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1G5G. 

14  May. 
M'  Clavks  gra- 
tuity during 
Hs  life. 


Ensigne  How- 
let  &  Left. 
Howard  to  lay 
out  the  GoQ- 
ners  land  on 
Ipswich  Kiuer. 

Ans'  to  over- 
seers peticon 
of  Brighams 
estate. 


[*223.] 

Coniittee  ab'y» 
Castle. 
Cap'  Dauen- 
ports  coiiiis- 
sion. 

Adjou'raent 
of  Charles 
Towne  Court. 


Coniittee  to 
take  y"  tres' 
account. 


Farmers  dis- 
charge, Tres- 
urer  to  rec.  y^ 
imposts. 


Ans'  to  Nicho. 
Whits  peti- 
Son. 


whole  parts  sequall  betweene  the  mother  and  the  sonne,  according  to  the  will, 
the  Court  graunts  theire  request. 

This  Court  having  made  an  order  in  the  eighth  month,  1652,  wherein 
M'^  John  Clarke  was  to  haue  tenn  shillings  of  euery  family  that  should  make 
vse  of  his  inventjon  for  saving  of  firewood  &  warming  of  howses,  which 
sajd  order  was  only  for  the  terme  of  three  yeares,  w''''  is  now  expired,  vppon 
a  mocon  made  to  this  Court  in  his  behalfe,  this  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to 
confirme  the  sajd  order  for  the  terme  of  his  life. 

Att  the  request  of  the  honnored  Gouerno"",  Jn°  Endicott,  Esq),  Ensigne 
Howlet,  &  Leftennant  Howard  is  appointed  to  lay  out  the  land  formerly 
graunted  him,  lying  by  Ipswich  River,  the  other  formerly  appointed  not 
having  donne  by  reason  of  theu'e  distance,  &G. 

In  ans''  to  y"'  peticon  of  Thomas  Danforth,  Jn"  Cooper,  Tho  Fox,  Jn° 
Hastings,  W"  Toune,  ouerseers  of  y''  childrens  estate  left  by  Thomas  Brigham, 
of  Cambridge,  deceased,  the  Court,  vpon  consideration  thereof,  &  the  will  of 
y"  id  Brigham,  doe  graunt  the  peticon,  prouided  that  the  ouerseers  giue  secu- 
rity to  the  County  Court  to  the  vse  for  the  principall  &  effects  thereof,  as  ex- 
pressed in  the  peticon. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Majo'  Atherton,  the  survejor  gennerall,  &  Captaine 
Davenport  shallbe  impowred  as  a  coiiiittee  to  finish  the  worke  at  the  Castle, 
to  provide  ladles,  spunges,  carriages,  &&,  at  the  countijes  charge,  and  that  the 
capt  of  the  Castle  haue  a  coiuission  given  him  according  to  the  tennor  of  his 
former  coinission,  that  he,  w""  the  present  garrison,  goe  on  w"*  the  countrjes 
affaires  at  the  Castle  till  the  next  session  of  this  Courte.  Itt  is  ordered,  that 
the  County  Court  to  be  kept  at  Charlestoune  on  the  17"^  of  June  shall  be  &  is 
adjourned  to  the  nineteenth  day  of  the  same. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Cap?  Gookin,  Cap?  Frauncis  Norton,  &  Cap?  Thomas 
Clarke,  w*''  the  survejor  gennerall,  shall  be  a  coiiiittee,  &  are  appointed,  to 
take  the  Tresurers  account,  and  to  make  retourne  thereof  at  the  next  sessions 
of  this  Court. 

Vppon  request  of  the  farmers  of  the  impost  of  wines,  who  alleadge  great 
losses  already  sustejned  thereby,  this  Court  doth  graunt  that  they  be  hence- 
forth discharged  of  the  agreement  made  w""  the  countrje  respecting  the  same, 
and  the  countrje  Tresurer  is  heereby  appointed  the  officer  to  receive  the 
imposts. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Nicholas  White,  the  coiiiittee  aphcnding  he 
hath  had  much  wrong  and  damage  in  being  outed  of  his  land  by  M"'  Hutchin- 
son, whereof  he  was  possessed,  and  where  vnto  it  appeared  to  them  he  had 
just  title,  therefore  he  ought  to  seeke  reparac6n  legally  at  the  hands  of  his 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  261 

disturbers,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  that  the  Gennerall  Courts  order,  dated  24"'      1  G  5  G. 
May,  1655,  respecting  this  case,  be  &  remajne  in  full  force.  ' 

14  May. 

Thomas  Hincksman  and  Joseph  Wheeler  are  allowed  by  this  Court,  ouer  ju  2,  added  to 
and  besides  w*  this  Court  allowed  them  in  October  Court,  1655,  three  pounds  Wheeler  & 

^  '  1  Hmcksmans 

two  shillings  in  referenc  to  .theire  paines  &  charge  expended  in  the  imploy  the  allowance. 
countrje  put  them  vppon  in  referenc  to  yeire  joui'ney  to  Cromwell,  &<3. 

In  ans'"  to  the  peticon  of  Symond  Lynd  «&  Thomas  Gatliife,  the  Court  Syraon  Lindes 

.  &  Tho.  Gatliffa 

doth  graunt  the  peticoners  liberty  to  trye  the  title  of  lands,  or  the  case  m  theire  liberty. 
peticttn  mencSned,  at  the  County  Court,  any  thing  in  the  lawe  notw^'standing. 

Whereas  it  was  ordered  by  the  coiuissioners  w'"''  came  into  these  parts  to  Yorke  &  Kit 
take  Yorke  &  Kittery  into  the  gouerment  of  the  Bay,  that  each  toune  should  ^.g 
make  chojce  of  certaine  men  from  amongst  themselves,  to  lay  out  the  bounds  be- 
twixt the  two  aforesajd  tounes,  according  to  w'*"  order  of  the  sajd  coinissioners, 
wee,  whose  names  are  heerevnder  subscribed,  being  elected  for  that  purpose, 
doe,  vppon  due  consideracon  thereof,  mutually  agree,  pitch,  &  appoint  the 
bounds  betweene  Yorke  and  Kittery,  to  beginne  as  followeth,  namely,  that  the 
dividing  Ijne  betwixt  Yorke  &  Kittery  shall  and  doth  beginne  at  the  head  of 
Brayboate  Harbor,  which  is  at  the  first  and  lowest  descent  of  that  fresh  brooke 
y/ch  lyeth  at  the  vpper  end  of  the  marishes  belonging  to  the  sajd  harbor,  being 
in  distance  about  one  mile  &  an  halfe  from  the  mouth  of  the  harbor,  and  from 
the  head  of  y*  harbor  to  runne  in  a  streight  Ijne  to  the  head  of  the  south- 
west braunch  of  the  Riucr  of  Yorke,  being  the  next  point  of  vpland  where 
the  creeke  treaues  about  to  the  northwest,  &  so  from  the  sajd  point  of  vpland, 
vppon  a  direct  Ijne  vnto  the  southeast  side  of  a  certajne  pond  which  lycth  be- 
twixt the  northwest  braunch  of  the  Riuer  of  Yorke  &  Newichawanacke.  In 
confirmacbn  of  which  aforesajd  bounds  wee  haue  heerevnto  sett  our  hands 
this  fowerteenth  day  of  December,  1653. 

Subscribed,  NICo   SHAPLEIGH, 

EDW:  RISHWORTH, 

ABRA:    PREBLE, 

NIC°   FROST, 

JN°  DAVIS. 

The  Court  approoves  of  the  retoume  of  the  comissioners  as  aboue,  in 
referenc  to  the  limitts  &  bounds  of  the  id  Yorke  &  Kittery. 

In  ans"^  to  a  quaestion  whither  one  that  serveth  a  whole  yeare  as  a  deputy,  Ans'  to  qua;s» 
though  chosen  &  called  thereto  from  session  to  session,  haue  not  the  same  pji^Tigdg,  &o. 
bennefit  of  lawe  as  he  y'  is  chosen  at  first  for  the  whole  yeai-e,  the  Court  re- 
solved it  on  the  negative. 


262 


THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1656. 

H  May. 

[*224.J 

Ans'  to  John 
Holmaus  peli- 


Aiis'  to  Left. 
Hues  peticon. 


Ans'  to  Jn" 
Smiths  peti- 
con, 10=  to  be 


Ans'  to  Hamp- 
ton peticon. 


Water  Toune 
to  pvde  for  & 
maintajne 
Mary  Davis 
child. 


*In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  John  Holman,  the  Court  judgeth  it  inconven- 
ient to  attend  the  hearing  of  the  case  at  present,  but  referr  it  to  the  next  Coun- 
ty Court  of  Suffolke  to  heare  partjes  and  witnesses,  and  if  it  appeare  to  the 
sajd  Court,  on  hearing  the  case,  that  there  is  just  cawse  or  reason  to  make  null 
or  alter  the  will  of  the  peticbners  ftither,  then  the  sajd  Court  to  state  the  case, 
and  report  the  grounds  thereof  to  the  next  session  of  this  Coiu't  ;  but  if  the 
contrary  appeare  to  the  sajd  Court,  viz.,  that  the  will  ought  to  be  &  remajne 
in  force,  then  the  peticoner  to  be  quieted,  and  not  make  any  further  trouble  ;  & 
in  y'  case  also,  the  Court  to  make  report  to  the  next  session  of  the  state  of 
the  case,  &  the  grounds  wherefore  the  will  should  be  &  remajne  in  full  force, 
provided  that  seeuritje  be  presently  taken  by  the  secretaiT,  to  the  value  of  one 
liundred  pounds,  on  the  estate  of  M''  John  Holman,  deceased,  to  be  responsall 
to  what  this  Court  shall  determine  &  conclude  herein,  on  information  from  the 
County  Court. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Left  Joshua  Hues,  administrator  to  the  estate  of 
Joshua  Foote,  deceased,  earnestly  desiring  this  Courts  confirmacon  of  his  sale 
of  that  part  of  the  warehowsc,  w''*'  M'  Foote  mortgaged  to  John  Johnson,  of 
Roxbury,  attourncy  to  M"''*  Katherin  Sumpner,  to  M'  Heniy  Shrimpton,  w'^''  he 
was  necessitated  to,  to  prevent  the  forfeiture  of  the  same,  and  being  advantag 
of  the  sajd  Footcs  estate  nere  ffifty  jjounds,  the  Court  graunts  the  i^cticouers 
request,  confirming  the  sale  of  the  Sd  warehowse  to  M'  Shrimpton,  as  desired. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Jn"  Smith,  of  Charlestoune,  humbly  craving  the 
remittment  of  the  fine  of  five  pounds  imposed  on  liim  for  the  breach  of  the 
law  about  selling  of  strong  water,  he  taking  some  for  a  debt,  &  being  ignorant 
of  y"  law,  lett  a  neighbor  haue  tenn  shillings  worth  thereof  as  it  cost  him,  for 
w*  he  is  sorry,  the  Court  remitts  the  sajd  fine  to  tenn  shillings,  so  as  it  be 
pajd  in  to  the  County  Tresurer  on  notice  heereof. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  the  toune  of  Hampton,  ffor  more  full  sattisfac- 
tion,  and  for  prevention  of  further  discord  betweene  the  tounes  of  Salisbury  & 
Hampton,  it  is  ordered,  that  M'  Samuell  Dudley,  w""  the  former  coiiilttee,  or  any 
two  of  them,  shall  againe  consider  of  the  case,  and  heere  the  allegations  of  both 
partjes,  and  present  a  retourne  with  a  plat  drawne  &  signed  by  some  artist  at 
the  next  session  of  this  Court,  with  theire  full  determination  &  explanation  of 
the  Ijne  betweene  the  sajd  tounes,  y"  charg  thereof  to  be  borne  by  Hampton. 

Vppon  a  mocon  made  by  the  keeper  of  the  prison  relating  to  y"  cliilde 
of  Mary  Davis,  how  it  should  be  maintajned,  &  charges  for  time  past  expend- 
ed about  it  defrajed,  it  is  ordered  that  the  toune  of  Watertoune  shall  defray  & 
discharg  the  charges  already  expended,  &  provide  for  its  maintainance  & 
education   for   time  to  come,  &  that  they  shall  &  heereby  are  impowred  to 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  263 

recouer  and  make  vse  of  any  estate  which  they  haue  or  can  finde,  of  hers  or      16  56. 
hir  husbands,  or  of  the  fathers  of  the  child,  for  the  mayntayning  thereof.  ''       ' 

14  May. 

In  ans''  to  the  petic8n  of  the  inhabitants  of  Groaten,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  ,    , , 
said  toune  of  Groaten  be  freed  from  rates  for  thi-ee  yeares  from  the  tjme  of  Groaten  peti 
thcire  graunt,  as  is  desired ;  2'^.  That  they  may  imploy  any  other  knowne 
artist  in  the  roome  of  INP  Danforth,  as  neede  shallbc  ;  3'^.  That  the  forme  of 
the  toune  may  a  little  vaiy  from  a  due  sq^uare,  according  to  the  discretion  of 
the  coiuittee. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Jn°  Stone,  this  Court  doth  graiint  the  confir-  Ans'  to  Ju» 

Stones  peticon 

macbn  of  y'  pcell  of  land,  fenct  in  &  broaken  vp,  w^*^  he  purchast  of  the  Indjans, 
lying  neere  the  south  side  of  Sudbury  lyne,  &  further  graunts  him  fivety 
acres  more,  to  be  added  thereto,  provided  it  be  not  pjudicijall  to  any  person. 
M"'  Nojes  &  Edniod  Rice  are  appointed  to  lay  out  the  land  aforesajd. 

*Whereas,  by  an   order  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  October,    1655,  wee,      [*225.] 
whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  were  appointed  to  heare  and  determine  the  Newbery  & 

Rowley 

differences  betwixt  Newbery  and  Eowley  concerning  theire  bounds,  this  is  to  bounds. 
certify  to  this  honnored  Court,  that  we  doe  all  agree  that  the  Ijne  formerly 
runne,  viz.,  from  a  white  oake,  marked,  standing  vppon  the  Morth  west  side  of 
Eastous  Eiuer,  nere  the  old  path,  ouer  the  riuer,  the  lyne  to  runne  west  on 
mile,  as  the  trees  are  marked,  and  from  the  trees  marked  at  the  mile  end 
vppon  the  lyne  having  a  heape  of  stones  lajd  there,  according  to  Coiut  order ; 
from  theuc  the  Ijne  to  runn  north  west  vnto  Merremacke  Riuer,  as  it  hath 
binn  laid  forth  ;  having  heard  the  pleas  of  both  tonnes,  haue  thus  de- 
termined.    Subscribed  vnder  our  hands,  17  1  m,  1655. 

JN°   WHIPPLE. 
SAMUELL   HALL, 
THOMAS   HOWLET. 

The  Court  approoves  of  this  retoui-ne. 

Richard  Nasou,  for  some  miscarriage  of  his,  was  bound  to  his  good  be-  Richard  Nasou 

,  ,  rejected  for 

haviour  by  the  last  Gennerall  Court,  &  so  to  continew  during  the  Courts  being  a  deputy. 

pleasure ;    yet  notw"'standing    is    by  the  constable   of  Kittery  retourned   to 

serve  as  a  deputy.     The  Court,  rejecting  the   sajd   Nason  for  serving  as  a 

deputy,  did  order,  that  the  next  County  Court  at  Yorke  shall  inquier  after  the 

names  of  such  freemen  of  Ivittcry  that  gave  theu'e  votes  for  the  choice  of 

Richard  Nason  to  be  a  deputy  to  this  Court,  and  whom  they  shall  finde  to  be 

guilty  in  such  respect  to  proceede  w"",  as  the  law  prescribes,  according  to 

theiie  deserts. 


264  THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1656.  Whereas  It  appeares  by  an  order  of  this  Gennerall  Court,  bearing  date 

'       '<       '    the  24*  of  the  8  ifi,  55,  that  Daniell  Smith  should  haue  liberty  to  bring  into 

14  Mh-v. 

„  Court  his  reasons  why  Grace  Porter  shoiild  not  sell  the  howse  and  land,  ac- 

Grace  Porter  •' 

&  Dani.  Smith,  cording  to  her  petition  vnto  this  Court,  the  aforesajd  Smith  appeared  before 
the  comittee,  20  3  ifi,  56,  and  gaue  in  his  reasons,  ^\'^^  were  seene  &  con- 
sidered, together  w""  seuerall  things  alleadged  on  both  sides ;  and  the  issue 
and  conclusion,  w"*  ffree  consent  of  both  partjes  before  the  comittee,  was,  that 
Grace  Porter  shall  haue  full  liberty,  w***  y"  good  will  of  Daniell  Smith,  her 
sonne,  to  dispose  of  the  howse  and  land  in  question,  for  her  vse  &  main- 
tenance, by  sale  or  otherwise,  &  shall  not  dispose  at  all  of  any  meadow  land 
that  is  not  already  disposed  of.  This  retourne  was  approoved  of  by  the 
whole  Court. 
Ans'  to  Sud-  In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  Sudbury,  the  Court 

for  a  new  plan-  j^'^o^''^  i^-  i^ieete  to  graunt  them  a  proportion  of  land  of  six  miles  square,  or 
tation.  otherwise,  in  some  convenient  forme  Eequivolent  therevnto,  at  the  discretion  of 

the  comittee,  in  the  place  desired,  provided  it  hinder  no  former  graunt,  and 
that  there  be  a  toune  setled  with  twenty  or  more  familjes  within  three  yeares, 
so  as  an  able  ministrje  may  be  there  majntajned ;  and  it  is  ordered,  that  M' 
Edward  Jackson?  Capt  Eliazer  Lusher,  Ephrajm  Child,  w""  M''  Thomas  Dan- 
forth  or  Leftennant  Ficher,  shall  &  hereby  are  appointed  as  a  comittee  to 
lay  out  the  bounds  thereof,  and  make  retourne  to  the  next  Court  of  Election, 
or  els  the  graunt  to  be  vojd. 
M'  Holiocks  M'  Elitzur  Holiocke,  at  his  request,  is  dismist  from  his  ffiu'ther  attend- 

dismission.       ^^^  ^^  ^.j^jg  Qq^j.)-^  ^  from  liis  attendanc  on  y*  next  session. 
Nason  nor  his  The  Court  judgeth  it  not  meete  to  release  Richard  Nason,  or  his  suretje, 

security  dis-      g^.Qj^  i^jg  hond  of  good  behaviour  at  this  time. 

charged.  ^ 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  warrant  shall  issue  out  of  this  Court  to  the  coun- 
stables  of  Sacho  to  take  such  aide  as  he  or  they  shall  judge  meete  to  sease  on 
the  person  of  John  Boniton,  and  bring  him  to  his  answer,  for  his  abuse  of 
authoritje,  &6,  as  in  the  warrant  is  exprest.  The  warrant  issued  out  accord- 
ingly, &  was,  — 
Courts  order  to  Yow  are,   by    virtue   of  an  order  of  the    Gennerall    Com-t,  sitting    at 

issue  out  war-   5^^^^,^  ^^le  24  of  May,  1656,  heereby  required  forthwith  to  repajre  to  the 

rant  to  y  con-  j '  '  j         -x  1.   j 

stable  of  Saco    dwelling  place  of  Jn°  Bonithon  at  Saco,  &  there  or  elswhere  to  seaze  on  the 

to  seaz  on  Jn«. 

Bonith.  pei-son  of  the  sajd  John  Bonithon,  &  him  safely  to  convey  to  Boston  prison, 

vnlesse  he  shall  give  good  securitje  of  knoune  inhabitants  of  y'  jurisdiccon  for 

his   personall   appearanc  before  the  next  session  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  to 

[*  226.1      answer  the  complaint  of  John  Stone  *for  beating  of  his  servant,  refusing  to 

obey  the   order  of  the   County  Covu't  at  Yorke,  in  the  yeare  1655,  for  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW  ENGLAND.  265 

payment  of  rates,  as  also  for  his  abusive  letter  to  the  Gennerall  Court ;  and      1656. 
if  any  inhabitants    there    shall    refuse  to    aide    or  asist    the    connstable    as 

^14  May 

abouesajd,  that  theire  names  be  retourned  to  the  County  Court  at  Yorke, 
there  to  be  proceeded  against,  according  to  lawe. 

In  ans"'  to  the  petiGon  of   Joseh  Jones,  the  Court,  considering  the  pe-  Ans'  to  Joseph 

Jones  petiooa  * 

tlcfiners  acknowledgment  &  humble  submission,  together  w"'  lus   solem  en-  g^ed  30». 
gagement  for  more  due  observanc  of  all  knoune  lawes  for  the  futiu-e,  judg 
meet  to  remitt  all  his  fine  to  thirty  shillings 

We,  whose  names  are  here  subscribed,  according  to  an  order  of  the  hou- 
nored  Gennerall  Court,  in  Nouember,  1655,  appointing  vs  to  make  a  just  di- 
vicon  of  the  pattent  of  Quampscot,  doe  thus  make  our  retourne :  — 

When  wee  came  to  pervse  the  pattent,  wee  found  it  to  extend,  for  the 
length  of  it,  from  the  lower  part  of  the  Riuer  of  Pascataquake,  on  the  south 
side  of  the  sajd  riuer,  vnto  the  falls  of  the  sajd  riuer  at  Exiter ;  and  for 
breadth,  along  the  sajd  riuer  thi-ee  miles  from  the  falls  of  the  head  Ijne  fox  the 
breadth  of  it ;  w"^*"  head  line  wee  runne  vppon  a  southeast  point  of  the  com- 
pass, w-''  ended  three  quarters  of  a  mile  beyond  Aspe  Brooke,  toward  Hamp- 
ton, about  forty  poles  below  the  highway,  where  wee  marked  a  great  red  oake 
on  fower  sides.  2'^.  From  the  sajd  head  lyne  wee  measured  for  the  length, 
vppon  the  north  east  point  of  the  compass,  sixe  miles  and  a  half,  the  w'^''  ex- 
tended to  that  part  of  the  bay  neere  "VVinicouot  Eiuer.  3'^.  Wee  also  meas- 
ured a  second  crosse  Ijne,  for  breadth,  beginning  at  Quampscot  Howse, 
extending  it  three  miles  vpon  the  southeast  point,  when  wee  did  marke 
seueraU  pine  trees.  The  rest  of  the  land  belonging  to  the  pattent  aboue  and 
beloue  the  great  bay  wee  vnderstood  to  be  impassable  (as  to  measuring)  by 
reason  of  the  exceeding  thicke  swamps,  but  wee  tooke  the  best  informacon  wee 
might  of  diuers  and  seuerall  inhabitants  of  the  great  bay  and  of  Strawbery 
Banke,  and  theire  reports  agreed,  viz.,  that  from  the  lower  part  of  the  bottom 
of  the  bay,  nere  to  Capt  Champnoones  house,  to  the  riuer  neere  the  Boyling 
Eocke,  or  thereabouts,  all  the  necke  of  land  w'l'in  that  Ijne  vnto  the  little  bay, 
conteyning,  as  neere  as  men  of  best  experienc  can  informe  vs,  about  fower  Co^itt^eg  ^g. 
miles  square,  being  all  w^in  the  patent.     And  whereas  from  the  easterly  part  himeab' 

^  '  ^  ^  Quampscots 

of  the  great  bay,  being  a  part  of  the  riuer,  wee  should  haue  measured  three  diviCon,  &5. 
miles  into  the  laud,  wee  finde  in  that  place,  by  credible  informacon,  the  land 
so  narrow  to  the  seaward  that  wee  canu  allowe  no  more,  according  to  the  in- 
tent of  the  pattent,  as  wee  vnderstand  it,  then  one  mile  &  halfe,  to  be  runn 
from  each  point  of  the  bottome  of  the  bay,  vppon  an  easterly  Ijne,  into  the 
land.     To  the  matter  of  service  appointed  vnto  vs  by  the  Gennerall  Coiut, 

VOL.    IV.  PART   I.  34 


266  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  56.     concerning  devission  of  the  pattent,  wee,  finding  the  present  ownors  to  be  of 
""^      ^     "''    three  sorts  or  rancks,  wee  haue  therefore  agreed  to  make  three  seuerall  devis- 

14  May. 

sions.     The  first  devicon  being  eight  shares  and  one  quarter,  belonging  to  M' 

Nathaniell  Gardiner,  M''  Thomas  Lake,  and  partners,  wee  assigne  and  lay  out 
M'  Lake  &  M'  vnto  them  all  the  land  from  Bloody  Point  vnto  the  Boyling  Rocke,  for  breadth, 
j_  '  '  or  thereabouts,  and  for  length  extending  to  the  lower  lyne  of  the  midle  di- 
viciSn,  which  is  about  forty  pole  from  Sandy  Point,  and  so  the  lyne  running 
sou^th  east  three  miles  into  the  land,  as  also  the  land  lying  vppou  the  bottom 
of  the  great  bay,  being  or  extending  one  mile  &  a  halfe  from  euery  part  of  the 
bottom  of  the  bay,  vppon  an  easterly  lyne.  Into  the  woods,  in  which  divlssion 
all  the  land  and  marish  graunted  vnto  Doner  by  the  Gennerall  Court  shallbe 
and  remajne  to  them  for  euer,  the  land  from  Kennrys  Creeke  to  a  certajne  cone 
[*227.]  nere  the  mouth  of  the  great  bay,  called  Hogsty  Coue,  w*all  the  *ihe  marish 
from  that  place  round  about  the  bay,  vp  to  Cotterllls  Delight,  with  fower  hun- 
dred acres  of  vpland,  as  it  is  graunted  by  the  Court,  bounded,  lajd  out,  and  pos- 
sessed by  the  inhabitants  of  Doner,  with  fiuety  acres  of  vpland  more,  about  or 
nere  the  great  bay,  w"'  fiuety  acres  to  be  lajd  out  and  disposed  of  by  Cap? 
Richard  Walderne,  to  some  of  the  inhabitants  of  Doner,  whom  he  sees  fitt. 
The  second  divlssion  being  eight  shares  and  one  quarter,  belonging  to  Cap? 

Capt.  'Wiggins  Thomas  Wlggin  and  partners,  who  haue  purchased  &  obtcjned  the  same,  wee 

p*. 

assigne  and  lay  out  three  miles  square,  beglnlng  at  a  plumpe  of  trees  stand- 
ing on  a  peece  of  old  planting  land,  about  forty  pole  beloue  Sandy  Point,  and 
vp  the  riuer  vppon  a  strelght  Ijne  towerds  Exlter,  the  riuer  being  the  bounds 
of  It  on  the  northside,  and  at  each  end  to  ruune  a  Ijne  vppon  the  south  east 
point  of  the  compasse  three  miles  into  the  land  there  to  bound  it  on  that  side ; 
provided,  that  Cap?  Thomas  Wiggins  pay  vnto  the  other  two  thirds  the  some 
of  sixty  six  pounds  thirteene  shillings  and  fower  penc,  according  to  theire 
shares  and  proporcons,  in  boards,  w^'ln  six  mouths,  if  demaunded,  which  he  is 
to  pay  at  either  of  his  sawemllls,  in  Pascataquak  Riuer.  3'y.  To  the  third 
Shrewsbury  dlvlcon,  being  eight  shares  and  one  quarter,  belonging  to  the  Shrewsbery  men, 
to  w'^^  wee  assigne  &  lay  out  all  that  land  from  the  vppermost  Ijne  of  the  midle 
divicon  to  the  mouth  of  the  creeke  called  M''  Wheelwrights  Creeke,  the  same  to 
runne  three  miles  towards  Hampton,  vppon  a  south  east  Ijne,  all  the  land  be- 
tweene  this  Ijne  &  Exlter  Falls,  to  the  full  extent  of  the  Ijne,  to  lye  to  Exeter, 
being  graunted  to  them  by  deed  of  guift  from  Capt  Wlggin,  sole  agent  for  the 
company.  The  Court  doth  allow  and  approove  of  this  retourne  of  the  coinit- 
tee  as  is  aboue  written. 

Propposicttns  to  the  Gennerall  Court  at  Boston,  the  ^S""  3  Si,  1656,  for 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  267 

selling  and  fully  ending  the  long  continued  differences  betwceue  the  patentees      1656. 
of  Quampscott,  and   Doner,  and  the   neighboring  tounes,  &6,  as  followeth  :    '       '^       ' 

«  .        .  14  May 

1.    For  the  furtherance  of  the  same,  Caiit  Thomas  Wiggins  &  Thomas  Lake  „       ^ 

°°  Capt.  Wiggina 

doe  freely  surrender  &  give  vp  all  theirc  interest,  title,  &  clajine  in  the  lands  &  M'  Lakes 

BurrciidGr   &c 

of  the  pattent  called  Winnicahanat  or  Hiltons  Poiute  vnto  the  inhabitants  of 
the  toune  of  Doner  foreuer,  excepting  all  the  lands  &  howses,  which  the 
ownors  improoved  at  Douer  in  three  planting  feilds,  which  is  about  sixteene 
acres,  more  or  lesse,  which  remajnes  to  the  sajd  ownors,  theire  heires  and  as- 
signes  for  euer.  2'^.  That  the  Court  graunts  and  give  vnto  the  third  divis- 
sion  of  Quampscott,  lajd  out  to  M''  Nathaniell  Gardjner,  Thomas  Lake,  & 
partners  of  that  divioon,  eight  thousand  two  hundi-ed  and  forty  acres  of  land, 
to  be  lajd  out  to  them  or  theire  assignes,  either  to  them  together,  or  to  each 
part  or  share,  one  thousand  acres,  there  being  eight  shares  and  a  quarter  in. 
y'  divicbn. 

3.  That  a  memorandum  be  kept  that  the  chai-ge  expended  about  this 
divicon  hath  binn  twenty  pounds. 

4}>.  Whereas  in  the  first  divicbn  lajd  out  to  M-  Gardjner  &  Thomas 
Lake  there  is  much  lands  in  the  possession  of  Strawbery  Bancke,  which  is 
still  in  differenc,  that  the  Court  will  impowre  some  comissioners  w*  full 
power  to  end  all  differences  whatsoeuer  betweene  the  sajd  toune  of  Strawberry 
Bancke  and  owners,  as  also  betweene  Hampton  &  them,  the  sajd  ouners  of  the 
first  divicbn. 

Signed,  THOjNIAS   WIGGIN, 

THOMAS   LAKE. 

The  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  accept  the  surrender  here  exprest,  and  doe  The  Courts 

1  -.^  r  1  T  1T1  n     n  .1,  acceptance  & 

graunt  the  peticoners  fower  thousand  one  hundred  twenty  &  five  acres,  w""  graunt. 
what  els  is  desired  in  theire  surrender,  and  orders,  that  Majo'  Willjam  Hau- 
thome,  M'  Willjam  Bartholmew,  and  M''  Samuell  Hall  shall  and  heereby  are 
impowred  and  authorized  by  the  Gennerall  Court  as  coinissioners  to  treate  w* 
the  inhabitants  of  Hampton  &  Strawbery  Bancke,  &,  on  a  full  hearing,  to  de- 
termine and  conclude  what  they  judge  meete  to  be  given  by  the  tounes  and 
accepted  of  by  the  persons,  and  make  theiie  retourne  to  the  next  Court,  who 
are  to  be  allowed  for  theire  paines  at  the  charg  of  the  parties. 

*In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Richard  Swayne,  this  Court  declares,  if  the      L  228.] 
petlcbner  haue  just  ground  to  implead  any  man  about  the  sajd  land,  that  he  gwaines  peti- 
may  doe  it  at  the  County  Coui-t,  but  for  the  title  of  the  land,  there  having  bin  ^°''' '"  '^''^"- 

ence  to  Mirri- 

so  many  hearing  and  much  expenc  in  the  Court  about  it,  judg  that  the  last  act  any  land,  &c. 


268 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1656. 

11  May. 
Becx  &  Compa. 
letter  to  y*" 
Court. 


Jn»  GifFords 
release  liere 
from  being  a 
prisoner  on 
Becx  ace'. 


Time  of  Yorke 
Courts  begging, 


M'  Alcocks 

request 

graunted. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Elliotts 
petition. 
Ans'  to 
Chelmsford. 


In  ans'  to 

Billirrikeys 

peticon. 


of  tlie  Gcnnerall  Court  concerning  the  same  is,  and  should  be,  the  finall  issue 
thereof,  w^'out  any  more  hearing  in  y*  respect. 

The  Court,  on  pervsall  of  a  letter  directed  to  the  Gouenor,  and  councill, 
and  Gcnnerall  Assembly  of  New  England,  or  who  els  it  may  cencerne, 
signed  by  Jn°  Becx,  Phcebe  Frost,  Tho  Foley,  Jn°  Pococke,  &  W""  Greenehill, 
bearing  date  27  of  February,  1655,  w''"^  also  was  recorded  in  the  Courts  day 
booke,  21"^  of  May,  1656,  the  same  day  on  which  it  was  brought  and  pre- 
sented by  M'^  GyfFord,  doe  jndge  meete,  in  answer  thereto,  and  on  theire  re- 
quest, doe  order,  that  the  sajd  Jn"  Gilford  shall  and  is  hcereby  released  and 
discharged  from  being  any  longer  a  prisoner,  vppon  the  judgment  of  this 
Court,  in  reference  to  the  sajd  Becx  &  Companj^,  for  which  he  hath  bin  and 
yett  is  a  prisoner,  he  discharging  the  charges  of  the  prison. 

Whereas  hitherto  by  appointment  the  County  Court  of  Doner  hath  binn 
kept,  begining  vppon  the  last  Twesday  in  June,  and  the  Court  for  the  county 
of  Yorke,  begiiiiug  vppon  the  Thirsday  following,  for  the  more  inlargement  of 
time  vnto  the  sajd  Courts,  it  is  ordered,  that  Doner  Court  shall  beginne  as 
before,  and  the  Courte  for  Yorke  on  the  Munday  fFollowing  ;  and  that  Cap' 
Thomas  Clarke  shallbe  asistant  w'''  Capt  Thomas  Wiggins  this  yeare  to  keepe 
the  County  Courts  of  Yorkeshire  &  Douer. 

In  ans'  to  the  request  of  M''  Jn"  Alcock,  the  Court  doth  graunt,  that 
Thomas  Danforth  or  Leftenant  Fisher  may  lay  out  y'  lands  meuconed  in  y'^ 
order  recited  by  him,  bearing  date  23  of  May,  1655. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  the  inhabitants  of  Chelmsford,  together  w""  y' 
part  of  ]\I'^  Elliotts  peticon  respecting  an  inlargement  of  land,  on  conferenc 
with  the  coiiiittee  who  lajd  out  the  bounds  of  Chelmsford,  and  pervsall  of  a 
plat  of  the  sajd  plantacons,  and  also  of  the  tracke  of  land  now  by  both  parts 
petic8ned  for,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  that  the  Indian  graunt  be  extended  a 
mile  from  the  north  east  angle  or  corner  bound  of  Chelmsford,  abutting  on 
Merremacke  and  Patu.ckett  eastward,  taking  in  John  Sagamores  planting 
ground,  and  the  end  of  the  sajd  mile,  to  determine  the  Indjan  plantacon  ;  and 
for  the  rest  of  the  land,  on  behalf  of  both  tounes  peticoned  for,  that  Chelms- 
ford south  and  north  Ijne,  abutting  on  Tadmuck,  be  extended  from  the  north 
west  angle,  or  corner,  three  miles  north,  so  as  it  passe  not  Merremacke  Riuer, 
and  from  thenc  to  runne  a  parralell  Ijne  w""  the  east  &  west  Ijne  of  Chelms- 
ford, vntill  it  meete  w"*  Merremacke  Riuer,  and  that  the  whole  tracke  of 
land  so  taken  be  &  remajne  in  coiiiunitje  vnto  the  toune  of  Chelmsford  and 
the  Indjan  toune  called  Patuckett  for  all  vses. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Billlrrikey,  this  Court  doth 
graunt  the  toune  of  Billirrikey  eight  thousand  acres  of  lands  for  the  ends 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  269 


U  May. 


desired  in  any  place  or  places  that  are  ffree  &  not  capeablc  of  making  a  tonne,  1  G  5  0. 
provided  that  the  sajd  lands  be  lajd  out  before  the  next  Court  of  Election,  and 
that  the  inhabitants  of  Cambridg  doe  accept  thereof,  &  disingage  the  lands 
desired  at  Billii-rikcy,  &  also  that  the  toune  of  Billirrikcy  be  seted  w"»  twenty 
familyes  at  least  ■\v""in  three  ycares,  y*  the  ordinances  of  God  may  be  setled  & 
encouraged  in  the  sajd  place  of  Billirrikey  ;  &  it  is  ordered,  y'  ISIajo""  Willard, 
Capt  Edw  Johnson,  M''  Edw  Jackson,  or  any  two  of  them,  w""  Thomas 
Danforth,  or  any  other  surveyor,  shall  lay  y"  same  out  at  the  peticoners  charge, 
making  retourne  to  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

*In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Sarah,  the  late  wife  of  David  INIattox,  the  Court      [*229.] 
iudseth  it  meete  to  allowe  &  confirme  hir  sale  of  two  acres  of  meadow  to  ^'"^' '"  ^'-^^^^ 

•'       °  Mattox  peti- 

Giles  Pason,  the  house  and  land  of  the   sajd  David  INIattox  standing  engaged  con. 
for  y°  payment  of  fivetecne  pounds  to  David  Mattox,  the  sonne  of   David 
Mattox   deceased,  five  pounds  whereof  was  given  him  by  the  County  Court, 
&  tenn  pounds  was  given  to  his  sister,  deceased. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Willjam  Cleoments,  of  AVater  Toune,  in  reference  Ans'  to  W" 
to  a  divorce,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meet  to  referr  the  hearing  and  determining  p^yj^^n"  ^ 
of  this  cause  vnto  the  County  Coiu-t  of  Charles  Toune  next  month. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  the  jury  of  trjalls  at  y'  last  County  Court  at  Ans'tojuryof 

„  , .  ,  ,  ,  T       .      .   .  ,    ,  c     1       •  c       •   1 1  •  1  trials  for  Nor- 

Salisbury,  humbly  desirmg  y'  the  expenc  ot  the  jury  oi  trjalis  necessarily  ex-  folk  petiCon. 
ponded  in  the  county  of  Norfolk  may  be  borne  by  the  countrje,  —  if  in  time 
to  come  there  shallbe  groimd  of  complaint  of  this  nature,  itt  is  ordered,  y'  on 
theire  request  to  the  County  Court  theire  necessary  expenses  shall  be  allowed 
out  of  the  county  tresury,  by  virtue  of  the  late  lawe  for  countye  tresurers. 

The  Magistrates  not  receaving  the  verdict  of  the  jury  in  ^M"  Hibbens  M"  Hibbins 
hir  case,  having  binn  on  triall  for  witchcraft,  it  came,  &  fell  of  course  to  the 
Gennerall  Court.  M''^  Ann  Ilibbins  was  called  forth,  appeared  at  the  barr ; 
the  indictment  against  hir  was  read,  to  w"^''  she  answered  not  guilty,  &  was 
willing  to  be  trjed  by  God  and  this  Court.  The  evidences  against  hir  was 
read,  the  partjes  wittnessing  being  present,  hir  answers  considered  on,  and  the 
whole  Court,  being  mett  together,  by  theire  vote,  determined  that  il"  Anne  Hib- 
bens is  guilty  of  witchcraft,  according  to  the  bill  of  indictment  found  against  hir 
by  the  jury  of  life  &  death.  The  Goucrno""  in  open  Court  pronounct  sentenc  Sentence, 
accordingly,  declaring  she  was  to  goe  from  the  barr  to  the  place  from  whence 
she  came,  &  from  thence  to  the  place  of  execution,  &  there  to  hang  till  she 
was  dead. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  warrant  shall  issue  out  from  the  secretary  to  the  mar- 
shall  gennerall  for  the  execution  of  M"'^  Hibbens  on  the  5"'  day  next  come 
fortnight,  presently  after  the  lecture  at  Boston,  being  the  19"'  of  June  next, 
the  marshal!  gennerall  taking  w*""  him  a  sufficijent  guard. 


270 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


16  5  6.  The  comissioners  for  the  seuerall  countjes  to  open  the  proxies  for  the 

''       '    nomination  of  magistrates  present  to  y'^  hoiinoured  Court  the  deffects  of  y* 

14  May. 

Tounes  defects  ^eueraU  countjes,  viz. :  — 

ab'  proxies.  \^  x}ciS.  county  of  SufFolke,  Hull  brought  no  proxies. 

"Weimouth  brought  theires  after  y^  day. 
In  Middlesex  :  Nashaway,  Bellirecay,  Chelmsford. 

In  Essex :  Wenham  after  y'  day,  Glocester,  Topsfield,  Manchester,  Mar- 
ble Head. 

In  Norfolke  :  Portsmouth,  Exiter,  Doner. 
The  county  of  Yorke  was  wholly  defective. 
Subscribed, 

WILLJAM   DAVIS, 
EDW:    COLLINS, 
JOSEPH  JEWETT, 
ANTHO:   STANIOK 


Ansf  to  M' 
Bradstreets 
request. 


Capt.  Oliuers 
allowanc  of 
10>»  towards 
losse. 


[*230.] 

From  henc. 
Comissioners 
of  VVeimouths 
acts  confirmed. 


Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary,  after  this  session,  shall  retourne  the 
names  of  the  tounes  that  haue  binn  defective  in  each  county,  as  aboue  is  exprest, 
to  the  clarke  of  each  County  Court,  who  is  here  by  required  to  sumon  the 
seuerall  tounes  to  send  some  meete  pson  to  appeare  before  the  next  County 
Court,  as  aforesajd,  to  answer  in  theire  behalf.  The  sajd  Court  shall  haue 
power  to  impose  such  fines  on  such  as  shall  appeare  delinquents,  as  the  lawe 
provides  or  they  shall  judg  meete. 

In  ans'^  to  the  request  of  M''  Symon  Bradstreete,  it  is  ordered,  that  M' 
Edward  Jackson,  M"^  Thomas  Danforth,  &  Leftennant  Fisher,  or  any  two  of 
them,  shall  be  a  coiiiittee,  &  are  hereby  authorized  to  lay  out  his  eight  hundred 
acres,  formerly  grauuted  him,  beyond  Dedham,  neere  Capt  Keaynes  fiarme,  in 
one,  two,  or  three  parcells,  as  the  place  is  capeable  of,  they  being  so  many  dis- 
tinct graunts  of  debt,  &  not  of  guift. 

Capt  James  Oliuer,  having  sold  vnto  Majo'  Atherton,  y"  survejor  geniill, 
20  barrells  of  pouder,  for  country  pay,  at  a  reasonable  rate,  was,  by  reason 
of  the  scarsity  of  pouder  y*  yeare,  enforced  to  purchase  it  at  a  deare  rate,  to 
make  good  his  bargaine,  whereby  he  was  a  great  looser,  which  this  Court  con- 
sidering of,  judge  meete  to  allow  him  tenn  pounds  towards  his  losse. 

*The  coinissioners  for  the  touue  of  Weimouth,  appointed  to  end  smale 
causes  there,  being  chose,  approoved  of,  and  sworne  by  y"  County  Court  some 
fewer  yeares  since,  according  to  lawe,  &  having  binn  continued  in  that  place 
vntill  this  present  yeare,  were  neuer  retourned  to  any  Court  to  take  theire 
oaths    annually,  yett,  on  the  request  &  desire  of  soundry  inhabitants,  haue 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  271 

ended  many  differences  amongst  them,  according  to  theire  best  skill.     Now,      16  56. 
to  prevent  any  evill  consequenc  which  might  ensue  vppon  such  a  neglect,  at    "^      ^        ' 

.  .  J.  14  May. 

theire  desire,  so  farr  as  any  of  theire  actings  haue  biun  just  &  according  to 
lawe,  this  Court  doth  confirme  the  same. 

Graunted  to  W  Joseph  Hills  five  hundred  acres  of  land  neere  Norwot-  M'  Hills 

graunt  of  500 

tocke,  where  M"  Bradstreet  &  others  haue  graunts,  in  consideracon  of  an  ad-  a„es. 
venture  of  thirty  three  pounds,  and  seuerall  services  to  y"  countrje. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Northwottock,  aljas  North  Ans'  to  Nor- 

mi  T*      1  •  1  Tvottocke 

Hampton,  W""  Holton,  Edward  Elmer,  &  Thomas  Baslom  are  appointed  to  petijon. 
end  smale  cawses  there  vnder  forty  shillings,  according  to  lawe,  and  that  the 
coiiiissioners  of  Springfeild  ai-e  hereby  impowered  to  give  them  theire  respec- 
tive oathes,  &  y'  such  connstable  as  shall  be  legally  chosen  there  by  the  in- 
habitants of  the  sajd  toune  shall  repajre  to  Springfeild  to  the  foresajd  comis- 
sioners,  to  take  his  oath  for  the  faithfuU  discharge  of  his  place. 

"Whereas  the  Court  hath  binn  informed  that  Robert  Bartlett,  of  North-  Courts  order  in 

_  .  Bartletts  case. 

wottocke,  aljas  Northhampton,  hath  comltted  a  great  misdemeanor  in  attempt- 
ing to  force  the  wife  of  one  Smith,  of  the  same  toune,  and  some  report  that 
he  did  force  the  sajd  Smiths  wife,  the  case  being  doubtfull,  and  not  yett  exam- 
ined, &  no  Court  or  magistrates  being  in  those  parts,  so  remote,  this  Court 
doth  order  and  appointe  M'  John  Pinchon  &  M"'  Elitzer  Holljocke  to  heare 
the  case  and  take  examination  and  testemonjes  therein,  io  heare  the  case  and 
take  examination  and  testemonjes  therein,  and  if  they  judge  the  case  capitall, 
then  to  cawse  the  offender  to  be  forthwith  sent  to  the  prison  at  Boston  to  an- 
swer the  same  at  the  next  Court  of  Asistants,  where  all  the  testemonjes  and 
examinations  are  to  be  sent,  &  the  wittnesses  required  to  appeare  at  the  sajd 
Court ;  but  if  it  be  found  by  them  only  a  misdemeanor,  &  not  capitall,  in  that 
case  they  shall  binde  ouer  the  sajd  Bartlett  vuto  the  County  Court  of  Middle- 
sex, held  at  Cambridge  in  October  next,  w*  sufEcijent  securitje  to  answer  for 
his  fault,  and  cawse  all  the  testimonjes  &  examinations  in  the  case  to  be  sent 
to  the  clarke  of  the  sajd  Court,  sealed  vp ;  and  the  Court  doth  heereby  giue 
full  power  to  the  aforesajd  coiSissioners  by  warrant  to  send  for  paitjes,  and 
make  full  processe  in  the  case  for  the  fullfiUing  of  this  order. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Rucke,  craving  this  Courts  fauor  to  Courts  judg- 
ment in  Rucke 
heare  the  case  betweene  him  and  James  Wall,  lately  issued  by  the  Court  of  &  Walls  case. 

Asistants,   the   Court   graunts  his  request,   provided   he    put  in  caution  to 

respond  the  charge  of  the  Court  whiles  they  heare  &  determine  it. 

In  the  case  depending  betweene  M''  Thomas  Rucke,  plaintiffe,  &  James 

Wall,  defendant,  about  a  third  pt  of  a  sawmill  sold  by  the  sajd  Wall  to  Edw 

Colcord,  and  by  Colcord  to  M'  Rucke,  the  Comt,  on  pervsall  &  examination 


272 


THE  EECOEDS  OF  TUE  COLONY  OF 


[*231.] 

Courts  ans""  to 
Georg  Bunker 
&  Edw.  Burt. 


Courts  ans^  to 
George  & 
Joanne  Hal- 
sails  peticon. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Dummers 
peticon. 
800. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Coggans  peti- 
con. 


of  the  evidences  in  the  case  produced  by  both  partjes,  the  Court  doth  judg  the 
sajd  sales  to  be  illegall,  and  that  the  right  propriety  of  tlie  sajd  third  pt  of  the 
sawmill  to  be  and  remajne  in  the  defendant,  &  determines  the  plaintiffe,  i.  e., 
INI'  Rucke,  to  discharg  the  charges  of  the  Coiut  for  half  a  day,  &  pay  the  de- 
fendant fforty  seven  shillings  costs. 

*In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  George  Buncker  &  Edward  Burt,  administra- 
to"^^  to  the  estate  of  Augustine  Walker,  humbly  craving  this  Courts  confir- 
mation of  two  sales  by  them  made,  the  one  of  the  bowse  &  half  acre,  w""  the 
priviledges  there  to  belonging,  lately  the  propper  estate  of  Augustine  Walker, 
to  Jn°  Trumble,  as  also  two  acres  of  land,  formerly  the  propper  estate  of  the  sajd 
Augustine  Walker,  vnto  Samuell  Carter,  both  for  the  sattisfacon  of  his  debts 
&  behoofe  of  the  ■^viddow,  the  Court  graunts  theire  request,  &  confirmes  the 
sales  accordingly,  provided  they  be  Aus'iu  Walkers  pr'r  estate. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  George  Halsall,  together  w"'  the  ans''  to  the 
peticon  of  Joane  Halsall,  there  having  biun  two  coinittees  that  haue  bad 
the  hearing  of  this  case,  whose  ap>hencbus  haue  binn  different  therein,  this 
Court  is  not  willing  to  act  heerevppon,  but  judge  it  meet  to  referre  the  exam- 
inacon  &  final  dctcrminacou  of  this  case  vnto  the  Court  of  Asistants,  to 
whom  it  doth  propperly  belong  ;  provided,  and  it  is  hcercbj^  ordered,  that  the 
sajd  Joanne  Halsey  shall  haue  libcrtje  to  goe  to  the  publlcke  meetings  on  the 
Lords  &  lecture  dajes,  or  at  other  times,  on  hir  occasions,  w"^out  interruption 
or  disturbance  from  George  Halsey,  or  any  on  his  behalfe  j  and  if  the  sajd 
Halsey  shall  goe  about  to  seaze  on  hir,  vex,  molest,  or  any  way  disturbe  hir  in 
the  streetes,  or  otherwise,  till  the  cawse  be  issued,  on  complaint  thereof  to  the 
Goueruo"'  or  Dep'  Gouerno'",  he  shall  be  comittcd  to  prison  till  he  give  bond 
for  his  good  behaviour  ;  and  it  shall  be  lawfull  for  any  inhabitant,  on  sight  of 
any  disturbanc  or  vjolenc  offered  the  sajd  Joanne  by  the  sajd  George,  to  res- 
cue hir  out  of  his  hands,  &  to  convent  him  before  authoritje. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  ISI''  Richard  Dummer,  craving  an  allowance  of 
laud  for  seventy  three  poimds  by  him  long  since  given  to  the  countrjes  vse  by 
the  appointm*  of  the  Court  in  the  yeares  1637  &  1639,  this  Court,  in  con- 
sideracon  thereof,  doth  graunt  the  peticoner  eight  hundred  acres  of  land  in 
any  place  that  is  free  from  former  graunts,  &  not  pjudiciall  to  a  plantacfin, 
provided  it  be  lajd  out,  bounded,  &  retourne  made  by  some  surveyor  w"'in  one 
yeare. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  Jn°  Coggan,  in  behalfe  of  Martha,  his  wife,  it 
being  on  reccord  that  five  hundred  acres  of  land  is  graunted  to  M'  Coytmore 
in  the  bounds  of  Woobourne,  and  that  it  is  to  be  set  out  by  the  Coixrt,  vnlesse 
the  partjes  agree,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  that  M"^  Thomas  Danforth,  or  John 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  273 


14  May. 


Shermau,  w*''  M'  Eclwai'd  Collins  and  Cap?  Edward  Johnson,  be  a  comittcc  to      165  6. 
lay  out  the  sajd  land  according  to  the  grauiit,  to  the  vse  of  the  heires  of 
the  id  M"^  Thomas  Coytraore,  at  the  charge  of  the  5d  John  Coggan,  vntill 
the  right  heire  be  determined,  making  theire  retourne  to  this  Court  in  Octo- 
ber next. 

In  ans"^  to  the  petic6u  of  M"'  Thomas  Bratle,  in  behalf  of  his  wife,  &  the 
rest  of  the  daughters  of  Cap?  W"  Tyng,  the  Court  judgeth  it  not  mcete  to 
heare  &  determine  the  case  menconed  in  his  peticon  at  this  time,  but  referr  the 
hearing  thereof  to  the  next  session  of  this  Coiut,  &  doe  therefore  order,  that 
securitjo  be  forthwith  given  to  the  secretary,  to  the  value  of  sixe  hundred 
pounds,  by  M"'  Coggan,  to  be  responsall  to  the  Court  for  the  estate  in  contro- 
uersie  vntill  this  Court  shall  determine  to  whom  it  doth  of  right  appertajne. 

The  Court,  having  read  &  considered  of  the  letter  sent  by  his  highnes  Courts  order 
to  this  Court,  w""  the  instruccons  given  by  him  to  Cap?  Daniell  Gookin  in  ref-  ^^  s^nt  to  his 
erenc  to  the  transplanting  of  persons  to    Jamaica,  doe  order  a  letter  to  be  ,'?,  ,''^',    ' 
drawne  vp  &  sent  to  his  highnes  from  this  Court,  to  manifest  theire  tliankfuU  let. 
acknowledgment  of  his  highnes  favor,  &d,  yv'^^  was  donne  accordingly,  &  is 
in  the  booke  of  letters. 

*Whereas  this  Court  is  informed  of  seuerall  neglects  of  the  Inhabitants      [*232.] 
of  Yorkeshire  in  not  being  furnished  w"'  sufHcyent  armes,  pouder,  &6,  as  the  C!apt.  Shap- 

ley  comia- 

lawe  requires,  there  being  no  gennerall  officer  at  present  to  call  persons  so  neg-  sioner  to  act  in 
lecting  to  an  account,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  that  Cap?  Nicholas  Shapleigh  ' 

shall  henceforth  haue  power  to  call  together  the  cheife  officers  of  each  com- 
pany w"'in  the  sajd  county  to  examine  such  abuses  and  defects  as  may  or  shall 
arise  amongst  them,  and  is  heereby  impowred  to  act  therein  as  a  majo'  may  & 
hath  power  to  doe  in  the  like  case,  till  the  Court  shall  take  further  order 
therein. 

Forasmuch  as  information  was  given  to  this  Court,  at  theire  last  session,  wittnesses  in 
that  some  wittnesses  in  Colcords  case  were  not  allowed  theire  charges,  att  which  jJ'i^g'^J  '^^| 
Court  it  was  ordered,  that  it  should  be  in  the  liberty  of  Salisbury  Court  to  »"*  "f  M' 

Stanions  fine. 

sattisfy  such  wittnesses  charges  out  of  the  fewer  pounds  thirteene  shillings  in 
M''  Stauion  hands,  due  to  the  countrje  as  a  fine,  &  as  yet  vnpajd,  which  sajd 
order  hath  not  biun  attended,  by  reason  no  notice  hath  binn  given  of  y" 
Courts  pleasure  herein,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  that  the  like  liberty  shall  be 
graunted  to  the  next  Court  at  Hampton,  to  act  according  to  former  order,  & 
a  retoiu-ne  of  the  ouerplus  of  the  sajd  soiue  to  be  pajd  into  the  countrje 
Tresurer. 

The  retourne  of  vs,  whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  in  referenc  to  the   27 :  12 :  1656. 

VOL.   IV. PART   I.  35 


274  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1656.      order  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  impowring  and  roquiring  vs  to  heare  and  detei- 
"       ""  mine  the  case  in  difFereuc  betweene  the  brethren  and  neghbors   of  Sudbury. 

14  May. 

Whereas  at  the  last  sessions  of  the  Genuerall  Court  held  at  Boston,  Octo,  55, 
wee  presented  a  br^ife  narration  of  a  majne  parte  of  the  case  in  differcnc  so  farr 
as  wee  had  then  heard  the  same,  w"^  some  quserjes  arising  therefrom,  vppon 
the  resolution  whereof  the  issue  of  the  case  doth  depend,  but  not  obtayning 
so  much  favor  of  this  honnored  Court,  according  to  our  bounden  duty  to  this 
Court,  requiring  vs  thereto,  as  also  the  sad  vncomfortable  estate  of  the  inhab- 
itants whilest  the  case  remajnes  vndetermined,  calling  earnestly  vpon  vs  to  de- 
clare our  a^hencons  and  determinations  touching  the  same,  wee  doe  there- 
fore, with  humble  submission  to  the  wisdome  and  authoritje  of  this  honnored 
Court,  heereby  declare  our  aphencons  and  determinacons  touching  the  same,  as 
followeth  :  1.  Concerning  the  title  of  lands  appropriated  to  seuerall  inhabitants, 
according  to  what  information  haue  binn  presented  ^Tito  vs,  wee  doe  not  finde 
just  cawse  to  make  vojd  theire  clajme  and  interest  concerned  therein  ;  and  as 
concerning  the  lands  held  by  the  reuerend  M"'  lirowne,  pastor  of  the  church 
there,  touching  a  parte  thereof,  some  objections  haue  binn  made,  and  clamorous 
reports  lajd  against  him,  wee  doe  not  finde  any  just  groimd  for  the  same,  but 
having  pervsed  the  tonnes  records,  doe  ap>hend  his  interest  in  such  his  lands  to 
be  good,  and  doe  heereby  confirme  the  same  to  him  and  his  heires  foreuer. 

2.  Concerning  such  lands  as  are  reserved  in  comon  for  feede,  whereof  we 
finde,  touching  one  part  of  the  sajd  comon,  by  coiiion  consent  and  agreement, 
the  rule  for  stinting  the  same  to  be  agreed  vppon  as  appeareth  in  the  touue 
booke,  fol  27,  as  also  the  bounds  of  the  sajd  comon,  therein  limitted,  the  which 
wee  doe  hereby  ratefy  &  confirme,  together  w"*  the  order  in  the  tonne  booke, 
foi  58,  so  farre  as  it  respecteth  that  part  of  the  cofiion.  And  as  for  the  other 
r*233  1  P^^''  °^  ^^^  coinon  within  the  *compasse  of  the  five  miles,  the  rule  for  stinting 
Comittees  re-  the  Same,  Wee  finding  that  hitherto  it  hath  not  binn  so  clearely  determined  as 
could  be  desired,  Avee  doe  therefore  agree  that  the  rule  for  stinting  the  same 
shall,  w*''  due  respect  had  as  well  to  such  who,  although  they  brought  good 
estates  into  the  toune,  yett  are  now  weakened,  having  improoved  the  same,  as 
also  theire  tjme,  and  other  personall  abilitjes  for  the  coinon  good  of  the  place, 
as  also  with  resjDect  had  to  such  whom  God  hath  binn  pleased  to  blesse  &  in- 
crease theire  estates,  and  thereby  are  made  more  able  to  be  vsefuU  &  profitable, 
as  well  persons  as  estates  for  the  coinon  good,  and  stand  in  more  neede  of  in- 
largement  of  theire  accoiiiodacons  then  formerly,  and  for  a  more  cleere  rule 
to  dii'ect  heerein,  wee  doe  hereby  declare,  that  it  is  our  intent  &  meaning,  that 
such  whose  estates  are  weakened  as  aforesajd  shall  be  considered  &  propor- 
tioned according  to  theire  seuerall  allottments  of  meadows,  which  gaue  them 


tume  in  Sud- 
bury case. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  275 

the  right  in  the  other  part  of  the  coiuon,  ah-eady  determined,  and  such  as  God 
hath  binu  pleased  to  increase  theire  estates  shall  be  considered  &  proportioned 
according  to  the  invojcc  of  theire  estates,  given  in  for  the  countrje  rate  last 
past,  w">out  any  respect  had  to  theire  meadowes  formerly  allotted  them.     Also 
wee  doe  heereby  declare,   that  no  person  or  persons  whatsocuer  shall  haue 
power  to  give  theire  votes  or  sufFerages  touching  the  sajd  coinous  but  such  as 
haue  binn  allowed  as  free  inhabitants  of  the  toune,  or  haue  come  vppon  the 
right  of  some  that  were  so  allowed,  and  that  in  such  wise  whereby  the  noum- 
ber  of  voates  may  not  be  increased  aboue  or  beyond  the  noumber  of  such  as 
had  theire  interest  by  graunt  of  the  tounc.     Also,  whereas,  since  our  last  meet- 
ing, wee  finde  that  the  reccords  of  the  toune  booke,  foi  58,  touching  this  case, 
haue  binn  crossed  and  defaced,  and  that  without  a  muttuall  consent  of  both 
partjes,  wee  doe  hereby  declare  that  the  sajd  act  was  not  allowable,  and  there- 
fore wee  cannot  forbeare  to  leaue  our  testimony  against  the  same ;  and  for  the 
future  wee  doe  agree  that  the  toune  booke  shall  be  kept  by  the  recorder  of  the 
County  Court  vntlU  there  be  a  loving  composure  and  agreement  for  former 
differences,  and  a  mutuall  chojcc  of  a  fitt  person  to  keepe  the  same;  &  ffur- 
ther,  wee  having  had  some  complaints  made  in  refercnc  to  the  title  of  Hugh 
Griffins  land,  the  objections  made  being  considered  by  vs,  wee  doe  hereby  de- 
clare, that  wee  judg  his  title  thereto  to  be  good  and  valid,  according  to  the 
transcript  thereof  in  the  toune  booke,  vnto  which  declaration  the  complaynants 
jojnctly  concurred  and  agreed.     Also,  wee  doe  hereby  declare,  that  such  of  the 
inhabitants  as  entred  their  contra  dissent  against  the  act  made  for  a  rule  of 
divission  of  the  last  two  miles  graunted  by  the  Court,  as   appearcth  in  the 
toune  booke,  ioi  56,  shall  haue  theire  interest  therein  according  to  estates 
and  persons.     Also,  wee  doe  declare,  further,  it  to  be  our  true  meaning,  that 
euery  pson  that  is  an  allowed    inhabitant    in    the  toune  shall  haue  liberty 
to  haue  his  comonage  according  to  his  meadow  or  invojce  of  his  estate  at  his 
pleasure  ;  and  no  person  which  hath  neither  meadow,  nor  is  an  aUowed  inliab- 
itant,  as  is  aboue  premised,  in  case  of  voting  shall  haue  no  power  to  make  any 

clajme  to  any  coiiionage. 

Signed,  SYMON  WILLARD, 

TH°    DANFOETH, 
J  NO    SHE  REMAN. 

Wee,  whose  names  are  vnderwrltten,  the  inhabitants  of  Sudbury,  doe 
heereby  testify  our  full  consent  &  owning  of  the  above  written  acts  of  the 
coinissioners,  with  all  harty  thanks  vnto  them  for  theke  paines,  faithfulnes,  & 
loue  therein  expressed,  humbly  intreating  the  honnored  Court  will  be  pleased 


276 


THE  EECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


165  6.      to  confinne  &  rattefy  the  same  for  the  ^venting  of  all  after  trouble,  &  for  set- 
ling  of  peace  &  truth  amongst  vs. 


14  May. 
Courts  apro- 
bacon. 


Signed, 


EDMOND   BROWNE, 

WALTER  HAJNES, 

PETER  NOJES, 

JN°   PARNITER,  Sen, 

EDMOND   GOODENOW, 

JOHN   GROUTE, 

W"  BROUNE, 

JN°  HAJME, 

PETER   NOJSE,  Jun, 

JN°   PARNITER,  Jun, 

JN"   SMITH, 

PHILEMON   WHALE, 

HEN:   CURTIS, 

THO:    PESBETH, 

JAMES   PENDLETON, 

JOSIAH  HAJME, 

HUGH  GRIFFIN, 

JANE   GOODENOW,  Widdow. 


The  Court  doth  allow  &  approove  of  the  retourne  of  the  comittee  above 
written. 


[*234.] 

Ans'  to  M' 

Gajners 

peticon. 


Day  humilia- 
tio. 


*In  ans'  to  y®  peticon  of  M'  Thomas  Gajner,  the  Court  declares,  that  if 
any  thing  be  due  to  him  by  audit,  &(5,  he  may  haue  his  remedy  at  the  County 
Court,  and  that  this  Court  will  not  attend  to  such  complaints  w^out  more 
cawse  then  by  the  peticon  doth  appeare. 

The  ll"'  day  of  June  next  is  coinended  by  this  Court  to  y"  seuerall  con- 
gregations w'^'in  this  juiisdiccon,  to  be  kept  as  a  publicke  day  of  humiljation, 
to  seeke  the  face  of  God  in  behalf  of  oui-  native  countrje,  in  referenc  to  the 
abounding  of  errors,  especially  those  of  the  Raunters  and  Quakers,  that  the 
Protector  may  be  preserved  from  the  machinatjons  of  evill  minded  persons, 
that  the  Lords  presence  and  blessing  may  be  on  the  navall  and  land  forces  of 
our  native  countrje  at  home  and  abroad,  that  the  Lord  would  goe  out  w"'  the 
Protestant  armjes  against  Anti-Xt  and  his  adhaerents,  the  setling  of  vnitje  and 
peace  amongst  the  churches  heere,  that  the  ordjnances  of  Christ  may  become 
more  effectuall  to  all,  especially  to  children  &  servants,  the  rising  generation. 

This  Court  is  adjourned  to  the  li***  of  October  next,  at  eight  of  the  clocke 
in  the  morning. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  277 


Att  a  Generall  Court,  held  at  Boston,  14  of  October,  1656.  1G5G. 

The  Court  mett  on  y*  day  appointed.  "  °''°''"- 

Present,  Y»  GoQno%  Cap?  Gookin, 

Dep'  Goiln%  Majo'  Geii  Denison, 

M--  Bradstreet,  Majo'  Willard, 

M''  Symonds,  Major  Atherton. 
Capt  Wiggins, 

THIS  Court,  having  heeretofore  made  a  lawe  to  restrajne  the  seuerall  in-  Law  prohibbit 
.  r         tils  transpor- 

habltants  of  this  jurisdiccon  from  exporting  mares  irom  hence  into  tor-  tation  of  mares 

raigne  parts,  expecting  the  like  lawe  to  be  established  in  the  rest  of  the  colonjes,  repealed. 

-w'"^  hitherto  hath  not  binn  effected,  &  not  knowing  any  reason  why  this  juris- 

diccSn  should  be  restrajned  and  others  left  at  liberty,  itt  is  therefore  ordered, 

that  the  sajd  law  respecting  the  exportacon  of  mares  be  henceforth  repealed, 

and  of  none  effect. 

This  Court,  taking  into  consideration  the  necessitje  of  restraying  from  y«  Sale  of  boates 
Indjans  whatsoeuer  may  be  a  meanes  to  disburbe  oiu-  peace  (k  quiet,  doe  order,  indjans  pro- 
and  by  the  authoritye  of  this  Court  be  it  enacted,  that  henceforth  no  person  or  ''''''"ed. 
persons  inhabitting  w"^in  this  jurisdiccon  shall,  directly  or  indjrectly,  any  wajcs 
give,  sell,  barter,  or  any  otherwise  dispose  of  any  boate,  skifle,  or  any  greater 
vessell  vnto  any  Indian  or  Indians  whatsoeuer,  vnder  the  pocnalty  of  fiuety  8. 

pounds,  to  be  pajd  to  the  countrje  Tresurer,  vpon  legall  conviction,  for  euery 
such  vessell  so  sold  or  disposed  of  as  aforeid. 

Whereas  there  is  a  cursed  sect  of  lijereticks  lately  risen  vp  in  the  world.  Order  agt  the 

,  ,        Til      Quakers,  &c. 

w'''«  are  coiuonly   called  Quakers,  who  take  vppon  them  to    be    luiediately  ^ 

sent  of  God,  and  infallibly  asisted  by  the  spu-it  to  speake  &  write  blas- 
phemouth  opinions,  despising  gouernment  &  the  order  of  God  in  church  & 
comonwealth,  speaking  evill  of  dignitjes,  reproaching  and  revjling  magistrates 
and  ministers,  seeking  to  turne  the  people  from  the  faith,  &  gajne  proseljtes  to 
theire  pernicious  wajes,  this  Court,  taking  into  serious  consideration  the  i>>m- 
ises,  and  to  prevent  the  like  mischiefe  as  by  theire  meanes  is  -nTought  in  our 
native  land,  doth  heereby  order,  and  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Court  be  it  or- 
dered and  enacted,  that  what  master  or  coinander  of  any  ship,  barke,  pinnace, 
catch,  or  of  any  other  vessell  that  shall  henceforth  bring  into  any  harbor, 
crceke,  or  coue  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon  any  knoune  Quaker  or  Quakers,  or  any 
other  blasphemous  ha?reticks,  as  aforesajd,  shall  pay,  or  cawse  to  be  pajd,  the 
fine  of  one  hundred  pounds  to  the  Tresiu-er  of  the  countrje,  except  it  ap- 
peare  that  he  wanted  true  knowledg  or  information  of  theire  being  such ;  and 


278  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


14  October. 

[*235.] 


1656.  in  that  *case  he  hath  libertje  to  cleare  himself  by  his  oath  when  sufficijent 
proofe  to  the  contrary  is  wanting  ,  and  for  default  of  payment,  or  good  se- 
ciiritje  for  it,  shall  be  coiiiiitted  to  prison,  &  there  to  contjnew  till  the  sajd 
some  be  sattisfied  to  the  Tresurer  as  aforesajd  ;  and  the  comander  of  any 
such  ship  or  vessell  that  shall  bring  them  (being  legally  convicted)  shall  giue 
in  sufficijent  securitje  to  the  GoQno'',  or  any  one  or  more  of  the  magistrates 
who  haue  power  to  determine  the  same,  to  carry  them  backe  to  the  place 
whence  he  brought  them  ;  and,  on  his  refusall  so  to  doe,  the  Gouerno'',  or  one 
or  more  of  the  magistrates,  are  hereby  impowered  to  issue  out  his  or  theire 
warrants  to  coiiiitt  such  master  or  comander  to  prison,  there  to  contiuew  till  he 
shall  give  in  sufficijent  securitje  to  the  content  of  the  Gouerno"'  or  any  of  the 
magistrates  as  aforesajd.  And  it  is  hereby  further  ordered  &  enacted,  that 
what  Quaker  soeuer  shall  arive  in  this  countrje  from  forraigne  parts,  or  come 
into  this  jurisdiccon  from  any  parts  adjacent,  shall  be  forthwith  coiiiitted  to 
the  house  of  correction,  and  at  theire  entrance  to  be  seuerely  whipt,  and  by 
the  master  thereof  be  kept  constantly  to  worke,  &  none  suffisred  to  converse 
or  speak  w"*  them  during  the  tjme  of  theire  imprisonment,  w"^""  shallbe  no 
longer  then  necessitje  requireth.  And  further,  it  is  ordered,  if  any  pson  shall 
knowingly  import  into  any  harbor  of  this  jurisdiccon  any  Quakers  bookes  or 
writings  concerning  theu-e  diuilish  opinions,  shall  pay  for  euery  such  booke  or 
writting,  being  legally  prooved  against  him  or  them,  the  soiiie  of  five  pounds  ; 
and  whosoeuer  shall  disperse  or  conceale  any  such  booke  or  writing,  and  it  be 
found  w"'  him  or  her,  or  in  his  or  her  howse,  and  shall  not  iinediately  de- 
liuer  in  the  same  to  the  next  magistrate,  shall  forfeite  and  pay  five  pounds  for 
the  dispersing  or  concealeing  of  euery  such  booke  or  writing.  And  it  is  hereby 
fiuther  enacted,  that  if  any  person  w'Hn  this  colonje  shall  take  vppon  them 
to  defend  the  haeretticall  opinions  of  the  sajd  Quakers,  or  any  of  theire  bookes 
or  papers,  as  aforesajd,  ex  annimo,  if  legally  prooved,  shallbe  fined  for  the  first 
tjme  forty  shillings  ;  if  they  shall  persist  in  the  same,  and  shall  so  againc  de- 
fend it,  the  second  tjme  fewer  pounds  ;  if  still,  notw*''standing,  they  shall 
againe  so  defend  &  maintajne  the  sajd  Quakers  haeretticall  opinions,  they  shallbe 
coiiiitted  to  the  howse  of  correction  till  there  be  convenjent  passage  for 
them  to  be  sent  out  of  the  land,  being  sentenced  by  the  Court  of  Asistants  to 
banishment.  Lastly,  it  is  heereby  ordered,  that  what  pson  or  persons  soeuer 
shall  revile  the  office  or  pson  of  magistrates  or  ministers,  as  is  usuall  with  the 
Quakers,  such  person  or  psons  shallbe  seuerely  whipt,  or  pay  the  soiiie  of 
five  pounds.  This  order  was  publiSed  21 : 8  jfi,  56,  in  seuerall  places  of  Bos- 
ton, by  beate  of  drumme. 

Itt  is  heereby  ordered,  that  the  ^sident  and  fellowes  of  Harvard  Col- 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  279 

ledg,  for  the  tjme  being,  or  the  majo'  part  of  them,  are  heereby  impowred,      1656. 
according  to  theire  best  discretion,  to  punish  all  misdemeano"  of  the  youth  in  »        ' 

Tin  1  1  n       ^^  October. 

theire  society,  either  by  fine  or  -vvhipping  in  the  hail  openly,  as  the  nature  ot  pj^^y^^j  g. 
the  offence  shall  require,  not  exceeding  tenn  shillings  or  tenn  stripes  for  one  feliowes  perm' 

to  punish 

offence ;  and  this  lawe  to  contineue  in  force  vntill  this  Court,  or  the  ouerseers  youth, 
of  the  colledg,  provide  some  other  order  to  punish  such  offences. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  all  sorts  of  corne,  and  other  things,  to  Prises  of  come. 
be  pajd  in  to  the  country  rate,  shall  be  in  all  respects  as  it  was  the  last  yeare, 
except  rye,  w"^  shall  be  pd  in  at  three  shillings  p  bushell,  and  Indjan  at  two 
shillings  and  fower  pence,  and  that  the  last  order  made  in  referenc  herevnto 
shall  be  of  force  for  this  yeare  ensuing. 

*This  Court,  considering  the   manifold   niercjes  of  God,  and  his  great      [*236.] 
kindnes  multiplied  vppon  vs  from  day  to  day,  notwithstanding  our  forgetfull-  Day  of  thanks 

^  ^      giving,  Nov. 

nes  of  him,  and  vnthankfulnes  to  him,  doe  comend  it  to  all  the  churches  in  5'\  1656. 
this  jurisdicuon  that  the  fifth  day  of  Nouember  may  be  kept  a  day  of  thanks- 
giving vnto  God,  that  hath  given  vs  the  gospell  of  his  Sonne,  &  cawsed  vs  to 
cleave  vnto  and  imbrace  the  same,  in  some  measure,  in  theise  backsliding 
tjmes,  hath  given  vs  peace  within  our  gates,  plenty  and  abonndance  of  the 
blessings  of  the  earth,  suppljed  our  churches  with  officers  beyond  our  expec- 
tation, made  vp  some  breaches,  as  an  earnest  of  liis  further  presence  w""  vs  & 
his  blessing  vpon  vs,  as  also  for  the  peace  &  preservation  of  our  nation  in  all 
the  difficultjes  &  daingers  they  haue  passed  thro,  and  therefore  doe  desire  his 
name  may  haue  the  glory. 

In  ans''  to  the  request  of  Tristram  Coffyn,  Jn"  Seuens,  Philip  Chalice,  Norfolk troope. 
&  seuerall  other  inhabitants  of  the  county  of  Norfolke,  the  Court  doth  graunt 
them  liberty  to  list  themselves  in  a  troope  of  horse,  and  that  they  enjoy  the 
priviledges  thereof,  provided  theire  novmber  and  furniture  be  sufficijent  ac- 
cording to  lawe. 

Itt  is  ordered,  y'  the  secretary  forthwith  issue  out  a  warrant  from  this  Warrant  to 

s6Dd  away  y* 

Court  to  the  marshall  generall,  or  his  dejjuty,  to  impresse  a  meete  boate,  &  Quakers, 
sufficijent  &  convenjent  help,  to  carry  doune  and  deliuer  the  Quakers  aboard 
M'^  Locke. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  millitary  officers  of  Dorchester  shall  and  heereby  Dorchester 

-TV        1-      i  liberty  to  sell 

are  impowred  to  sell  one  of  the  countrjes  great  gunnes  at  JJorcnester,  pro-  ^  ^^^^  ^^^^ 
vided  they  buy  lesse  in  its  roome  to  the  full  value  thereof  "f  y°  co^nfjes. 

The  Court,  having  considered  of  the  offences  comitted  by  Niccolas  Vp-  Nicholas  Vp- 

.  .11  1  •  1  1  •  -11  shalls  censure 

shall,  m  reproaching  the  honnored  magistrates,  and  speaking  against  the  lawe 
made  &  published  against  Quakers,  judge  meete  &  haue  determined  that 
the  sajd  Vpshall,  for  such  liis  offences,  shall  pay  as  a  fine  to  the  countrje  the 


280  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1656.  soine  of  twenty  pounds,  w''''  if  he  pay  not,  his  estate  shall  be  seized  vpon  by 
'  *  ^  the  raarshall  before  he  be  lett  out  of  prison,  and  also  that,  the  sajd  fine  being 
pajd,  he  shall  depart  this  jurisdiccon  ^''^n  one  moneth,  and  not  to  retourne 
vnder  the  pcenalty  of  imprisonment,  there  to  continew  close  prisoner  vntill,  by 
publicke  acknowledgment  before  some  County  Court,  ^  giue  sattisfactjon  for 
what  he  hath  spoken. 

A  letter  from  the  Generall  Court  of  Conecticot  was  presented  to  this 
Court,  (together  w**"  seuerall  quaestions  of  practicall  concernment  in  the 
churches,)  wherein  they  propound  theire  desires  of  our  concurranc  w""  them 
in  desiring  the  help  of  the  elders,  for  the  resolution  and  clearing  the  sajd 
queestions,  and  for  that  end  that  a  tjme  and  place  of  meeting  be  assigned  by 
this  Court,  and  notice  thereof  may  be  given  to  the  rest  of  the  colonjes,  that 
they  may  haue  the  optunitje  to  contribute  theire  asistance  to  this  worke.  The 
Court,  considering  the  premises,  dotli  order,  that  ISI''  Mather,  M'  Allyn,  JNI'^  Nor- 
[*237.]  ton,  M''  Thatcher,  of  the  county  of  Suffolke,  *M''  Bulkely,  if  he  cann  come,  M' 
Meeting  of       Chauucey,  M''  Syms,  M""  Sherman,  JI''  Michells,  of  the  county  of  ;Midlesex,  IM"^ 

elders  in  June  ,  .   ,,  -^  -, ,    -.-r-ri  ■  •  ^«-    .r-.  i  -t  ,.  /*  -n 

next.  Norrice,  M^  Ezekiell  Rogers,  M'  Whitmg,  M'  Cobbet,  ot  y''  county  of  Essex, 

be  desired  to  meet  at  Boston  the  first  fifth  day  of  June  next  following,  to  con- 
ferr  and  debate  the  sajd  qutestions,  or  any  other  of  like  nature  that  shall  or 
maybe  propounded  to  them  by  this  Court,  either  amongst  themselves  or  w"' 
such  divines  as  shallbe  sent  to  the  sajd  meeting  from  the  other  colonjes ;  and  it 
is  expected  that  the  resolution  of  the  sajd  questions,  together  w"^  the  grounds 
&  reasons  thereof,  be  presented  to  the  Generall  Court,  to  be  coiiiunicated  and 
coiiiended  to  such  of  ours  that  want  information  therein ;  and  it  is  heereby 
ordered,  that  Robert  Turner  take  care  to  provide  convenjent  entertaynement 
for  the  sajd  gent"  during  theire  attendance  on  the  sajd  meeting,  and  that  the 
charges  of  those  of  this  jurisdiccon  be  defrajed  by  the  Tresurer ;  and  it  is 
further  ordered,  that,  together  w""  the  letter  &  quserjes  from  Conecticott,  a 
coppy  of  this  order  be  sent  to  all  the  confocderated  colonjes,  w"^  a  letter  from 
this  Court  desiring  theire  asistanc  in  this  buisnes  at  the  tjme  &  place  afore- 
sajd,  y'  the  secretary  send  a  copy  hereof,  w"^  the  quffirjes,  to  one  of  y"  elders 
of  each  county. 
Plaintiff  or  It  IS  ordered  by  this  Court,  that,  in  all  cawses  that  are  to  be  transferd 

defend'  to         ^^.^^^^  ^j^^  Countv  Courts,  by  reason  of  the  disagreement  betweene  the  Court 

pcure  copies  of  j  '      ^ 

r  County         and  the  jury,  to  the  Generall  Coiu't,  that  it  shall  be  the  care  of  the  partjes. 

Courts  pro-  in  i  p     i         i 

ceedings  be-      either  plaintiffs  or  defendants,  that  doth  or  shall  expect  benefit  by  the  prose- 
hcTred'^u''^^    cution    thereof,  to    bring    copies  of   the  proceedings  of   the    County  Court, 
10.  attested  vnder  the  hand  of  the  clarke,  w"'out  w'^''  no  cawse  of  that  nature 

shallbe  admitted  into  this  Court. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  281 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  case  betweene  Majo''  Hauthorne  and  Amos  Richard-      165  6. 
son,  plaintiffs,  ag«  Jn"  Divan,  defendant,  heard  the  last  Salem  Court,  and  not    ^^^^^ 
issued,  be  referred  to  the  next  Generall  Court.  AmosRichard- 

The  case  bet^v-eene  M^  Sheafe,  atturney  to  W  Shelden,  ag'  Joshua  Hues,  ^™;^;;et.^Jn» 
adnnuistrato'-  to  v»  estate  of  M'  Joshua  Foote,  heard  at  the  last  County  Couit  heard  next 

'  ^^   r>  Court. 

at  Boston,  and  not  then  issued,  is  referrd  to  the  next  Generall  Court.  jj,  gheidons 

The  Court,  having  heard  &  considered  the  whole  case  betweene  M'  Bratle  case  tobe  trjed 
and  the  daughters  of  Cap?  Ting,  against  M'  John  Coggan,  concerning  the  court, 
estate  of  Thomas  Coytmore,  the  only  sonne  of  M'  Thomas  Coytmore,  late  of  ^;^°fjf^"* 
Charles  Toune,  who  dying  in  his  minoritje,  the  estate  remayneth  in  the  hands  case,  &c. 
of    Martha,  the   relict   of  the   id  Thomas   Cojtmore,   now  wife    of   M'  Jn° 
Coggan,  vnto  whom  this  Court  doth  confirme  the  sajd  estate,  both  of  lands  & 
goods,  and  doth  hereby  order,  that    the    sajd  M^  Coggan,  in    consideration 
thereof,  doe,  w^-in  sixe  months,  pay,  or  cawse  to  be  pajd,  to  the  sajd  M" 
Bratle,  and  to  the  three  other  children  of  Capt  Tyng,  two  hundred  pounds, 
that  is  to  say,  to  euery  one  of  them  fiuety  pounds. 

The  two  counstables  of  Kittery,    ^    Ellingham  &     ^     ,  being  bound  by  Counstables  of 
the  County  Couit  at  Yorke  to  appeare  before  the  Generall  Coiut,  attended  the  ehardged. 
SS""  of  October,  and  made  such  answer  to  what  was  objected  against  them  as 
the  Court  accepted,  &  they  were  dismissed. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Samuell  Archer,  of  Salem,  shall  be  sattisfied  and      [*238.] 
pajd  by  the  countrye  Tresurer  the  some  of  seventeene  pounds  fiueteene  shil-  ^^^°^^ 
lings,  &  is  for  his  bringing  the   prisemeu  to  the   prison    and  vnloadlng  M'  Archer. 
Gardjners  catch,  the  County  Court  of  Salem  not  having  fines   sufficijent  to 
defray  publicke  charges,  out  of  W'l  it  should  haue  binn  pajd. 

It  is  ordered,  that  one  eight  part  be  added  to  the  countrje  rate,  and  to  be  Addition  toy 

'•-'■*-  ,     countrje  rate. 

pajd  together  with  it  in  wheate,  pease,  or  malt,  at  such  prises  as  the  rate  is 
pajd  in,  and  to  be  deliuered  to  the  survejor  generall  &  Capt  Oliuer,  or  by 
theire  appointment,  for  the  procuring  of  a  coiuon  stocke  of  pouder  for  the 
countrje  ;  and  the  Tresurer  is  heereby  ordered  forthwith  to  send  forth  his 
warrants  to  the  seuerall  counstables  to  levy  &  collect  the  same. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  Deputy  Goueno',  Capt  Clarke,  M'^  Secretary,  &  Comitteeab' 

pvsing  acts 

Cap?  Savage  shall  examine  the  lawes  of  the  Generall  Court  lor  two  yeares  ^f  court, 
past,  and  to  cawse  such  lawes  as  are  of  public  concernment  to  be  written 
out,  whereby  they  may  forthw"^  be  coiSitted  to  the  presse,  &  sent  to  the  seSU 

Courts. 

The  Court,  being  sencible  of  the  lowe  condicon  of  the  late  honnored  M'  M-NoweUs 

'  ^  ^  recompenc. 

Nowells  family,  &  remembring  his  long  service  to  this  comonwealth,  in  the 
place  not  only  of  a  magistrate,  but  secretary  also,  for  w*  he  had  but  litle  and 

VOL.  IV. PART    I.  36 


282 


THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1656. 


Comittee  to 
setle  Hamp- 
ton bouDds. 


Ans'  to  Left. 
Srues  peticon. 


Ans'  to  Mary 

Batchilers 

peticon. 


lO"  allowed  y 
secret,  for losse 
of  come  for  y« 
42",  &c. 


[*239.] 

Ans'  to  Anne 
Knights  peti- 


Ans'  to  Fran- 
cis Brounes 
peticon. 


Courts  graunt 
of  1000  acres  to 
M'  Deane  Win- 
thiop. 


slender  recompeno,  &  the  countrjes  debts  being  such  as  out  of  the  country 
rate  they  cannot  comfortably  make  such  an  honnorable  recompenc  to  his  family 
as  otherwise  they  would,  judge  meete  therefore,  do  give  &  graunt  to  M" 
Nowell  and  hir  sonne  Samuell  two  thowsand  acres  of  land,  to  be  lajd  out  by 
M'  Thomas  Danforth  and  Robert  Hale,  in  any  part  of  the  countrje  not  yett 
graunted  to  others,  in  two  or  three  farmes,  that  may  not  hinder  any  plantacon 
to  be  errected. 

There  having  binn  heretofore  an  order  of  this  Com-t  appointing  seuerall 
coiuissioners  to  setle  the  bounds  betweene  Hampton  &  Salisbury,  w'^'^  is  not 
yett  effected,  the  coiiiissioners  not  appearing,  that  a  finall  issue  may  be  put 
therevuto,  it  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Bryan  Pendleton,  M'"  George  Gittings, 
Kofet  Lord,  &  Ensigne  Howlet,  or  any  two  of  them,  shall  be  a  coiiiittee  to 
setle  all  differences  betweene  the  two  touues  in  referenc  to  theire  bounds, 
according  to  the  last  order  of  this  Gcnerall  Court,  making  retourne  thereof  to 
y"  next  Court  of  Election. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Robert  Drue,  humbly  craving  that  no  customes 
be  taken  for  the  wines  brought  in  the  prize  from  y^  West  Indies,  itt  is  ordered, 
that  the  sajd  Robert  Drue  and  the  rest  shall  pay  the  customes  for  y'  sajd  wines 
brought  in  according  to  order. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Mary  Batchilcr,  desiring  liberty  from  this  Court 
to  dispose  of  hirself,  hir  husband  being  gonne  from  hir,  &  as  she  ptends,  since 
his  going,  married,  &6,  the  Court  judgeth  meete  to  referr  the  examination  of  the 
case  to  the  next  County  Court  at  Yorke,  and  the  sajd  Court  to  make  retourne 
of  what  they  finde  to  y''  next  Court  of  Asistants,  who  haue  power  to  issue  and 
determine  the  case. 

The  secretary,  as  agent  for  the  colonjes  two  yeares  past,  was  pajd  by  the 
Trestu'er  forty  two  pounds  odd  money,  in  Indian  corn,  at  three  shillings  p 
bush,  which,  for  y"  most  pt,  he  could  make  but  two  shillings.  Itt  is  ordered, 
that  the  Tresurer  pay  him  tenn  pounds  for  such  liis  losse. 

*In  ans"^  to  y'^  peticon  of  Anne  Knight,  widdow,  for  the  remittment  of 
thirty  pounds  due  to  y*  country  from  hir  late  husband,  the  Court  judgeth  it 
meet  to  abate  hir  tenn  pound  thereof. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Elijah  Corlett,  on  y'  behalf  &  by  order  of  Fraun- 
cis  Broune,  y"^  married  the  relict  of  George  Bennet,  humbly  craving,  for  y' 
pvention  of  all  future  clajmas,  that  they  would  be  pleased  to  confirme  theire 
sale  of  the  howse  to  Jn"  Shawe,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meet  to  graunt  the  pe- 
ticoners  request. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  M''  Deane  Winthrop,  craving  this  Courts  favo' 
to  graunt  him  such  a  proporcon  of  land  as  formerly  was   appointed    to    his 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  283 

honnored  father,  at  Chocliituit,  &  should  haiie  bimi  layd  oat  b>  Cap?  Pelham      1  G56. 
and  M^  Pendleton,  the  Court  doth  graunt  vnto  the  peticoner  a  thousand  acres  of    '^^^^^^^ 
land  where  he  cann  finds  it  free  from  former  graunts,  and  not  hindering  a 

plantation. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Jn"  Samuell,  the  Court  doth  graunt  the  sajd  ^^'^t^J^"^^. 
Jn"  Samuell  liberty  to  sell  the  land  w*  he  lately  purchased  of  John  Viol,  of  £„„. 
o/ w*  land  the  howse  was  burnt,  &  impowres  him  to  make  a  good  title  thereto, 
so  as  the  children  of  his  wife,  in  lejw  of  theire  interest  in  the  sajd  land,  be 
instated  such  howse  and  land  as  he  shall  purchase  in  Boston,  and  that  at  least 
it  be  of  as  good  value  as  that  wherein  they  had  interest,  and  it  is  left  to  y 
commissioners  of  the  toune  of  Boston  to  see  it  effected. 

In  ans^  to  the  peticSn  of  Daniell  Fairefeild,  the  Court  graunts  him  liberty  AnsUo  Faire- 

'^  .  •  J    J     •  r  1,  feilds  peticon. 

to  goe  in  one  of  theise  shipps  to  England,  as  he  desiers ;  provided,  if  he  euer 
come  againe,he  shall  forthwith  retourne  to  the  same  condicon  as  now  he  is  in, 
&  be  forthwith  coinitted  to  prison. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  M'  Willjam  Hubbard,  of  Ipswich,  Sen,  the  Co^t^gta^t^ 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  him  a  thousand  acres  of  land  in  any  place  or  ° 
places  that  he  cann  finde  lying  out  of  any  former  graunts  or  touneships  beyond 
Exiter  Eiuer,  toward  the  east  or  north  east,  to  be  lajd  out  to  him  by  M'  W" 
Bartholmew,  M^  Thomas  Bradbuiy,  &  M-^  Samuell  Hall,  or  any  two  of  them ; 
tliis  being  in  sattisfaction  of  fivety  pounds  disbursed  by  him  in  England;  and 
also  the  land  graunted  to  him  by  this  Court  in  the  yeare  1652,  w*  he  hath  re- 
signed vp  to  the  Courts  hands  againe. 

In  ans^  to  the  petic-Qn  of  Edward  Bui-t,  though  the  Court  judge  not  the  Co-'--' »»_ 
countrje  to  be  bound  to  secure  prlsners  or  pay  the  damages  which  may  arise  tison. 
by  theire  escape,  yett,  in  regard  the  petic-oner  is  but  lowe  in  his  estate,  this 
Coui-t  doth  graunt  the  peticoner  two  hundred  acres  of  land  where  he  cann 
finde  it,  according  to  lawe. 

Wee,  whose  names  are  vnder  written,  ouerseers  to  the  last  will  and  tes-  Co-ts  allow- 
tament  of  Barnabas  Fewer,  having  mett  together  w"'  Jn"  Jn°son,  that  marned  t,i^&  oQsera 
the  execcutiis  of  the  sajd  Fawers  will,  have  agreed  that  the  two  howses  lately  XencTo  r 
in  the  possession  of  Barnabas  Fawer,  being  somewhat  better  then  the  one  ^^2°Lu. 
whole  half  of  that  estate,  shallbe  and  remajne  the  inheritance  of  Eliazer  Fawer, 
only  child  of  the  sajd  Barnabas  Power ;   the  rest  of  that  estate,  consisting  in 
goods  &  debts,  hereby  is  &  shall  be  estated  on  W  Jii°  Johnson,  in  right  of  his 
wife,  with  a  wood  lott,  being  the  ninth  from  Cambridg  Ijne,  to  the  sajd  Jn» 
Johnson  and  his  heires,  w"''  sajd  lott  came  from  Thomas  Negus  to  the  sajd 
Grace  Power.     And  it  is  further  agreed,  that  the  ouerseers  of  the  sajd  will 


14  October. 


284  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  56.      shall  pay  vnto  the  sajd  John  Johnson  thirteene  pounds  out  of  the  next  rents 

of  the  two  houses  aboue  menconed  to  make  his  part  aequall  w'*'  the  chllds 

half.     All  w*  wee  humbly  desire  the  honnorcd  Court  would  be  pleased  to 

confirme,  y°  overseers  of  that  will  having  subscribed  theire  names  to  a  paper 

annext. 

JAMES   PENN, 

W=«   PADDY, 

THOMAS   MARSHALL, 

JOHN   JOHNSON. 

The  Court  doth  allowe,  &  approoves  of  the  agreement  aboue  mencSned, 
&  orders  it  to  be  recorded. 

Courts  order  to  It  is   ordered,  that  the  charg  of  y°  comittee  of  the  Gennerall  Court 

Sudbury, ^o       expended  at  Sudbury  55,  as  also  the  charg  of  the  councill  of  elders,  &c, 
tees  &  charges  there  in  fifty  sixe,  to  defray  coinittees,  &6,  amounting  in  all  to  seventeene 

there  to  Jn"  i         ii  i  j  • 

Parmiter.         pounds  five  shillings  &  two  penc,  be  borne  by  all  the  toune,  &  levyed  as  is 
vsuall  in  other  rates. 
[*240.]  *The  Coui-t,  having  considered  of  the  case  respecting  Cambridge  and  those 

Cofiiittee  in      of  the  South  side  of  the  riuer,  finde  it  attended  w**"  such  difficultjes  as  will  not 

rfifcrsiic  to  v" 

inhabitants  of   admitt  at  present  of  a  comfortable  issue,  doe  therefore  judge  meete  to  referr 

Cambridg.        ^^^  ^^^^  j.^  ^^  further  enquired  into  by  a  comittee,  and  to  that  end  haue  chosen 

M'  Tresurer,  Cap?  Lusher,  &  M'  Ephrajm  Child,  who  are  heereby  appointed 

to  informe  themselves  more  fully  of  the  estate  of  Cambridg,  and  whateuer 

else  they  shall  judge  meet,  w"''  may  be  necessaiy  for  this  Court  to  know,  and 

to  make  retourne  thereof  to  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

AnsUoLeP  In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Lef?  W™  Phillips,  the  Court  vnderstanding 

ps  peti-      -^     ^^^  customes  of  the  wines  menconed  in  the  peticon  amount  to  vpwards 

con.  ^  *■ 

of  forty  pounds,  vppon  a  just  account,  yett  the  peticoner,  being  vnwilling  to 
proceed  in  a  legall  course  of  lawe  for  the  recouery  thereof,  is  willing  to 
take  but  thirty  pounds,  w*  the  Court  judgeth  meete  to  allow  him  vppon 
account  w**"  the  audito'. 
Courts  ans'  to  The  Coui't,  having  considered  of  a  paper  presented  by  the  audito"^  genefl, 

y»  auditors       ^  ^^^^  thereto,  judg  it  necessary,  that  the  audito''  contjnew  in  his  place,  and 
attend  his  worke,  vntill  the  next  Court  of  Election,  when  the  Tresurer  hath 
fully  cleared  his  accounts,  and  that  Court  to  determine  concerning  the  contjnu- 
anc  of  such  an  ofiice  in  this  commonwealth. 
Courts  judg-  The  County  Court  at  Boston  having  made  report  of  what  they  had  deter- 

mined in  referenc  to  the  case  concerning  M""  John  Holmans  will,  according  to 
the  order  of  the  Generall  Court,  May,  1656,  i.  e.,  that,  notwithstanding  the 


ment  ab'  Jn* 
Holmans  will. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  285 

evidences  produced  by  Jn°  Ilolman,  w*''"  are  on  file,  they  judged  the  will  of      16  56. 
the  sajd  Holman  legally  prooved,  &  see  no  cawse  to  alter  the  same,  this  Court  ''       ' 

^^  14  October. 

doth  approove  of  the  sajd  act  of  the  County  Court. 

Capl  W""  Torrey  &  Cap?  Richard  Brackctt  are  appointed  as  comissloners  Couiittee  to  lay 
from  this  Court  to  joyne  w""  two  from  Pljmouth  on  the  18""  of  Nouember  ""^g'  ol'mead- 
next,  to  meet  at  Walter  Briggs  house,  at  an  eleven  of  the  clock,  to  lay  out  "^^  ^*  Conm- 

IlflSS6t> 

the  sixty  acres  of  meadow  according  to  the  agreement  betweene  our  & 
Pljmouth  coinissioners,  &  in  case  they  agree  not,  they  fower  are  to  choose  a 
fifth,  and  any  three  of  them  are  to  determine  it,  making  retourne  of  what  they 
shall  doe  to  the  next  Gefi  Court.  This  to  be  donne  at  the  charge  of 
Hingham. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  Edward  Goflfe,  itt  is  ordered,  that  what  M'  Ans' to  Edward 
Richard  Russell,  Tresurer,  &  M'  Ralph  Mousall  shall  finde  on  examlnac6n  of 
the  sajd  Gofl"s  account  to  be  due  vnto  him,  on  a  just  account,  shall  be  pajd 
vnto  him  out  of  the  publicke  tresury. 


*jltt  a  Generall  Court  of  Election,  held  at  Boston,  6**  of  May,  1657.     1657. 

JN°  ENDECOTT,  Es^,  was  chosen  Govern'  for  this  yeare  ensuing,  &       6  May. 
tooke  his  oath  in  open  Court.  [*241.] 

Rich  Bellingham,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep'  Goil  for  this  yeare  ensuing,  & 
tooke  his  oath. 

M''  Symon  Bradstreet, 
M'  Samuell  Symons, 
Cap?  Tho  Wiggins, 
Cap?  Daii  Gookln, 
Majo"^  Daniell  Dennlson, 
Majo'  Symon  Willard, 
Majo''   Humphry  Ather- 
ton, 

Edward  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretary  for  this  yeare  ensuing. 

M'  Edward  Russell  was  chosen  Tresurer  for  this  yeare  ensuing. 

M'  Symon  Bradstreet,  &         "]  were    chosen  Comissioners    for  y*  Vnited 
Majo'  Gen  Daniell  Denison,  J  CoUonjes. 

The  Goflno'  &  1 
Dep'Goflno^    }  ^'''^''- 


were  chosen  Aslstants,  &  tooke  thelre  oaths 

in  Court, 
was  chosen  Majo'  Generall. 


286 


THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


foil:- 


The  names  of  the   Deputys  retournd  to   serve  at  this  Court  were  as 

Majo""  "W™  Hawthorne,  for  Salem. 

M"^  Rich  Russell  &  Tho  Lyue,  for  Charles  Toune. 

Left  Roger  Clap,  Ens  Hopstill  Poster,  for  Dorchester. 

Capt  Tho  Savage,  Capt  Tho  Clarke,  for  Boston. 

M'  Jn"  Johnson,  M"'  Phillip  Elliott,  for  Roxbury. 

M'  Ephraim  Child,  M'  Charles  Chadwick,  for  Water  Toune. 

M'^  Thomas  Layton,  for  Lynn. 

M""  Edwards  Collins,  M"^  Thomas  Danforth,  for  Cambridg. 

M^  \yni  Hubbard,  Left  Jn°  Apleton,  for  Ipswich. 

Left  Jn"  Pike,  for  Newbury. 

Thomas  White,  for  Weimouth. 

M'  Jer  Houchin,  for  Hingham. 

M"'  Robt  Merriam,  for  Concord. 

Cap?  Eliazer  Lusher,  for  Dedham. 

M''  Tho  Bradbury,  for  Salisbury. 

Rofet  Page,  for  Hampton. 

Maximilljan  Jewet,  for  Rowley. 

Sam  Basse,  for  Braintrje. 

Cap?  Rich  Walderne,  M^  Vai  Hill,  for  Douer. 

Capt  Edw  Johnson,  for  Wooborne. 

Humphry  Chadborn,  for  Kittery. 


Majo''  W"  Hauthorne  Speaker  for  y°  session. 


Coraittee  ah* 

ministers 

maintainanc. 


Forasmuch  as  there  are  many  complaints  of  the  great  suffering  of  the 
familyes  of  diuerse  reQend  ministers  of  Gods  word  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon,  for 
want  of  such  suitable  supply  as  theire  state  &  condicon  doe  require,  the  which 
thing,  if  reall,  tendeth  not  only  to  the  reproach  of  the  chiu-ches  of  Christ 
planted  in  theise  parts,  but  also  to  the  scandall  of  our  proffessiou,  and  the 
losse  of  the  Lords  fauorable  presence  w"*  vs,  itt  is  therefore  ordered,  that 
Capt  Tho  Savage,  Capt  Eliazer  Lusher,  and  Surveyo'  John  Johnson,  for 
Suffolke ;  M''  Richard  Russell,  Capt  Edw  Johnson,  and  M'  Edward  Collins,  for 
Midlesexe ;  INIajo''  Hauthorne,  M"'  Hubbard,  Sen,  &  Capt  Gerrish,  for  Essex ; 
Cap!  Pendleton,  M''  Val  Hill,  &  M"'  Bradbury,  for  Norfolke,  be  comittees 
impowred  respectively  w"'in  the  seuerall  countjes  to  enquire  concerning  the 
truth  of  the  sajd  complaint,  and  (if  any  be)  of  the  grounde  and  cawse  thereof, 
as  also  where  they  shall  finde  any  defect,  to  enquire  into  the  state  &  condicon 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  287 

of  the  people  to  ^  such  minister  doe  belong,  and  make  retourne  thereof  to  the 
next  sessions  of  this  Courte,  that  so  this  Court,  w'^''  are,  by  Gods  promise, 
nursing  ffathers  to  the  chm-ches,  may  see  that  there  be  meate  in  Gods  howse, 
and  the  Lord  may  still  delight  in  vs  to  dwell  amongst  vs,  and  to  blesse  both 
vs  &  our  poore  posteritje,  and  the  sajd  scandall  taken  of  &  prevented  for  the 
future. 

•Seeing  it  is  difficult  to  order  and  keepe  the  howses  of  publicke  entertajne-     [*242.] 
ment  in  such  conformity  to  the  wholesome  lawes  established  by  this  Court  as  l^keepers  ij- 

ceiise  Ijraited 

is  necessary  for  preventjon  of  drunkenes,  excessive  drinking,  vajne  expenc  to  one  yeare. 
of  money,  tjme,  and  the  abuse  of  the  creatures  of  God,  itt  is  therefore  or- 
dered by  this  Courte  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  no  person  or  persons 
heereafter  shall  be  lycensed  to  keepe  an  howse  of  coiiion  entertajnement,  or 
to  sell  strong  waters  for  any  longer  then  one  yeaie  at  one  tjme,  and  that  such 
as  keepe  howses  of  publicke  entertajnement,  or  sell  stronge  waters,  which  for  the 
present  ai-e  the  present  vintners,  during  theire  contract  excepted,  shall  and  heere- 
by  are  enjoyned  to  repajre  once  w^in  this  yeare  to  theire  seuerall  County  Courts 
for  renewing  theire  seuerall  lycenses,  according  to  this  lawe,  for  which  they  are  to 
pay  two  shillings  &  sixe  penc  to  the  clarke  of  the  Court,  or  els  they  shall  for- 
feite  and  pay,  as  vnljcensed  alehowse  keepers,  for  euery  offeuc  ffive  pounds. 

Forasmuch  as  the  recorders  of  the  seuerall  countjes  are  by  lawe  injoyned  Recorders  ffeei 

stated. 

to  record  all  wills  and  inventorjes,  mortgages,  and  sales  legally  brought  vnto 
them,  and  safely  to  keepe  the  same,  and  as  yet  no  lawe  hath  provided  or  de- 
termined theire  just  recompence,  this  Court  doth  therefore  order  that  the  ffees 
of  the  recorder  or  clarke  of  any  County  Court  shallbe  as  followeth :  For 
entry  of  of  a  mortgage,  or  sale  of  howses  or  lands,  verbatim,  not  exceeding  a 
page,  consisting  of  twenty  eight  or  thirty  lynes,  eight  words  to  a  lyne,  twelve 
penc,  and  proporconably  to  eight  pence  p  page  for  what  it  shall  exceede ;  and 
for  attesting  the  record  on  the  originall  deede,  sixe  pence  ;  and  in  like  manner 
for  wills  and  inventorjes,  w""  six  pence  a  peece  for  filing  vp  the  originall,  and  safe 
keeping  thereof ;  and  for  eutring  an  order  as  for  the  determining  of  an  estate  of 
such  as  dyed,  intestate  or  other,  wherein  the  Court  is  to  give  theire  approbacbn  • 
or  determinacon,  twelve  pence  ;  and  for  entry  of  the  examinacSn  and  proceedings 
of  the  Court  in  any  criminall  case,  or  presentments,  w""  the  judgment  of  the 
Courte  therein,  two  shillings  and  sixe  penc ;  and  for  entry  of  a  recognizanc, 
twelve  penc,  to  be  pajd  or  secured  in  Court  by  the  delinquent  party. 

Itt  being  found  by  experjence  that  the  countrje  is  much  troubled  to  pros-  Comissioners 
ecute  ofiences  of  an  inferior  nature,  and  to   execute  and  performe  what  the  ^^^^  g.  ^^^ 
lawe  in  seuerall  cases  requires,  by  reason  that  the  magistrate  live  farre  remote  eomission'" 
from  some  parts  of  the  countrje,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  tliat  for  this  present 


6  May. 


288  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1  ()  5  7.  yeare,  INIajo"'  W"  Hauthome  in  Salem,  Lynne,  Marblehead,  S;  Manchester,  M"^ 
Richard  Russell  in  Charlestoune  and  Maiden,  Capt  W™  Gerrish  for  Newbury, 
'M''  Bradbury  for  Salisbury,  Capt  Edward  Johnson  for  Wooburne,  Redding,  & 
Billirrikey,  Capt  W"  Torrey  for  Hingham,  Weimouth,  and  Nantascott,  Cap? 
Eliazer  Lusher  for  Dedham  and  Meadefeild,  bee  impowred  in  all  criminall 
cases  binding  ouer  offenders,  taking  testimonys  vpon  oath,  swearing  of  connsta- 
[*243.]  bles,  taking  acknowledgments  of  deeds,  *marriages,  to  act  in  theire  respective 
places  as  any  one  magistrate  may  doe,  of  all  which  acts  they  are  to  keepe  a 
dew  record,  which  they  shall  retourne  to  the  Court  of  the  countje  to  w'^'' 
they  belong,  and  all  lawes  impowring  the  coinissioners  for  the  ending  of 
smale  cawses  (except  the  coinissioners  of  Boston  &  Yorkshire,  to  act  in  the 
cases  aforesajd)  are  heereby  repealed. 
Title  to  inhaer-  This  Court,  taking  into  serjous  consideracon  the  great  neglect  of  many  per- 

&  Ijmitted.  SOUS,  in  the  infancy  of  these  plantacbns,  to  observe  any  due  order  or  legall  course 
for  the  confirmacon  of  such  sales  and  aljenatjons  of  bowses  and  lands  as  haue 
passed  from  man  to  man,  w'^''  thing  may  seuerall  wajes  be  of  very  ill  conse- 
quence to  posterity  in  future  tjmes,  doe  therefore  order,  and  heereby  enact, 
that  any  person  or  persons  that  hath,  either  himself  or  by  his  graunto"  or 
assignees,  before  the  lawe  made  for  direction  about  inhasritances,  bearing  date 
October  19,  1652,  possessed  and  attayned,  as  his  or  theire  oune  propper  right  in 
ffee  simple,  any  howses  or  lands  w*''Ln  this  jurisdiccon,  and  shall  so  contjnew, 
whither  in  theire  oune  persons,  theire  heires  or  assignes,  or  by  any  other  per- 
son or  persons,  from,  by,  or  vnder  them,  w"'out  disturbanc,  lett,  suite,  or  deny- 
all,  legally  made,  by  having  the  clajme  of  any  pson  thereto  entred  w*  the 
recorder  of  the  county  where  such  howses  or  lands  doe  lye,  w""  the  name  of 
the  person  so  clayming,  and  the  quantitje  &  bounds  of  the  land  or  bowse 
claymed,  and  such  clajme  prosecuted  to  effect  w'Mn  the  terme  of  five  yeares  next 
after  the  twentjeth  of  of  this  present  moneth,  euery  such  proprietor,  theire 
heires  and  assignes,  shall  for  euer  after  injoy  the  same  w*out  any  lawfull  lett, 
suite,  or  disturbance,  or  deniall,  by  any  after  clayme  of  any  person  or  persons 
whatsoeiir,  any  lawe  or  custome  to  y'  contrary  notw"'standing  ;  and  for  all  bar- 
gaines  and  alienacons  made,  or  to  be  made,  after  the  aforesajd  tjme,  that  euery 
pson  concerned  therein  observe  the  directions  given  in  the  aboue  recited  lawe, 
vpon  perrill  of  suffering  all  the  damage  that  shall  acrue  to  them,  theire  heires 
and  assignes,  by  neglect  thereof. 
Rectifying  as-  Whereas  it  is  evident  that  there  is  much  injustice  &  insequallitje  in  the 

assessments  of  publicke  rates  in  each  toune  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon,  whereby 
some  are  eased,  others  burthened,  and  the  comonwealth  ^judiced,  for  the 
prevention  whereof,  it  is  ordered,  that  howses  &  lands  of  all  sorts  shall  be 


sessments. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  289 

rated  at  an  acquall  and  indiiferent  value,  according  to  thcire  worth  in  the  tounes      16  57. 
and  places  where  they  lye  ;  also  euery  bull  &  cowe  of  fower  yeares  old  and  vp-  ^' 

6  May. 

ward  at  three  pounds ;  heifers  &  steeres  betweene  three  &  fower  yeares  old  at 
flvety  shillings,  and  betweene  two  &  three  old  at  forty  shillings,  &  betwixt 
one  and  two  yeares  old  at  twenty  shillings  ;  euery  oxe  of  fower  yeares  old 
and  vpward  five  pounds ;  euery  horse  and  mare  of  three  yeares  old  and  vp- 
wards  tenn  pounds,  betweene  two  and  thi-ee  yeare  old  at  seven  pounds,  of 
one  yeare  old  and  vpwards  five  pounds  ;  euery  ewe  sheep  above  one  yeare  old 
five  and  twenty  *shillings ;  euery  goate  above  a  yeare  old  at  eight  shillings  ;  [*244.] 
euery  weather  sheepe  aboue  one  yeare  old  at  tenn  shillings  ;  euery  swine  abouc 
one  yeare  old  at  twenty  shillings  ;  euery  asse  aboue  one  yeare  old  at  forty  shil- 
lings ;  and  in  all  other  respects  to  proceede  as  provided  in  the  printed  law,  title 
Charges,  Publicke,  and  according  to  the  lawe  for  rectifying  assessments,  made 
May,  1651,  that  so  many  great  estates,  though  more  obscm-e  and  difficult  to  finde 
out,  may  beare  theii-e  due  and  just  proportion  w"'  such  estates  as  are  more 
obvjous,  &  cannot  be  hidd. 

Whereas  this  Court  hath  made  seuerall  orders  for  the  preventing  of  ex-  All  sorts  of 
cesslve  drincking  and  di-unckeness  amongst  the  Indjans,  and  yett,  notw^stand-  prohibited  to 
ing,  there  is  litle  or  no  reformacon  in  that  kinde,  but  it  appeareth  by  com-  y°  l'>'i'''°s. 
plaints  from  all  parts   of  the  countrye,  and   by  frequent  expedient,  that  no 
moderacon  cann  be  attayned  to  prevent  drunckenes  amongst  them,  (the  fiuites 
whereof  are  murder  and  other  outrages,)  this  Coui-t,  therefore,  the  premisses 
considered,    doth   heereby  wholly  prohibitt   all    persons,    of    what    quallitje 
soeuer,  henceforth  to  sell,  trucke,  barter,  or  give  any  strong  licquors  to  any 
Indian,  directly  or  indirectly,  whither  knoune  by  the  name  of  rumme,  strong 
waters,  wine,  strong  beere,  brandy,  cidar,  perry,  or  any  other  strong  liquors 
going  vnder  any  other  name  whatsoeuer,  vnder  the  pojnalty  of  forty  shillings  Vnderpoenalty 
for  one  pinte,  and  so  proporconably  for  greater  or  lesser  quantitjes  so  sold,  ^g  ' 

bartered,,  or  given,  directly  or  indirectly,  as  aforesajd.  And  for  the  better 
execution  of  this  order,  all  trucking  houses  erected  (not  allowed  by  this  Court) 
shall  be  forthwith  demolished.  And  for  the  better  effecting  of  this  order,  it 
is  declared,  that  one  third  part  of  the  poenalty  shallbe  graunted  to  the  in- 
former. It  is  also  ordered,  that  speciall  care  shall  be  had  by  the  grand  jury 
of  euery  Shire  Court  to  inquire  &  present  to  the  Court  what  they  finde  or 
discouer  matter  leading  to  such  a  practize  against  the  true  intent  of  this  lawe  ; 
and  all  other  orders  giving  Uberty  to  sell  strong  liquors  to  Indians  are  heei'eby  vnless  in  case 
repealed,  and  all  licenses  formerly  graunted  are  hereby  disabled  and  called  in ;  "  '^^'''<^'''"'* 
provided,  alwayes,  that  it  is  not  intended  that  this  lawe  shall  extend  to  re-  *»  be  allowed 

by  one  magis- 

strayne  any  person  from  any  charitable  act  in  releiving  any  Indian  (bona  fide)  trate,  &c. 

VOL.  IV. PART    I.  37 


THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

in  case  of  suddaine  extremitje  by  sicknes  or  fainting,  vhicli  calls  for  such  help 
not  exceeding  one  dramme,  nor  when  any  phisition  shall  prescribe,  in  way  of 
phisicke,  any  of  the  particulars  before  mcnconed,  so  as  vpon  sight  of  his  direc- 
tion in  writing,  there  be  allowance  had  vnder  the  hand  of  one  magistrate,  or 
where  no  magistrate  is  in  the  toune  residing,  vnder  the  hands  of  the  toune 
cofiiissioners  or  two  of  them. 
Owners  of  catie  It  is  ordered  by  this  Court   and  the  aiithorltje  thereof,  that  eQy  person 

(rpav"v''dain-  ^i^'^ii'o  noticc  given,  or  otherwise  left  in  writing  at  theire  howse  or  place  of 
age  or  replevy    yg^xaH  aboade,  of  any  theire  catle  impounded   or  otherwise   restrained,  shall 

y"  catle  on 

peril!,  &c.         forthwith  giue  sattisfaccbn  to  the  party  wronged,  or  otherwise  replevy  theire 

catle  and  prosecute  the  same  according  to  lawe,  vppon  perrill  of  suffering  all 

the  losse  and  damage  that  shall  come  to  theire  catle  by  standing  in  the  pound 

[*245.]      or  *other  lawfull  place  of  restrajnt,  vntil  such  tjme  as  the  party  wronged  shall 

retourne  his  damage  in  a  legall  way. 

Ciarks  of  )■•  This  Couj-t,  taking  into  theire   consideracon  the  great  damage  that  will 

w  nsecutiiT"    vnavoydeably  acrue  to  the  posteritje  of  this  comon  wealth  by  the  generall  neg- 

y« lawe  ag' such  jg^^.  ^f  observing'  the  lawe  iniovninEC  a  record  of  all  births,  deaths  &  marriages 

as  refuse  to  re-  °  J   J         o  o 

cord  y»  name  within  this  collony,  doe  therefore  order,  that  hencforth  the  ciarks  of  the  writts 
born  dy  or  i'^  each  toune  respectively  take  due  care  for  effecting  the  same  according  to 
marry,  &c.  ^j-^g  intent  of  the  aforesajd  lawe :  and  in  case  any  person  or  persons  shall  neg- 
lect theire  duty  required  by  the  sajd  lawe  more  then  one  month  after  any 
birth,  death,  or  marriage,  the  clarke  of  the  writts  shall  demand  the  same,  w"" 
twelve  pence  a  name  for  his  care  and  paynes  ;  and  in  case  any  shall  refuse  to 
sattisfy  him,  he  shall  then  retourne  the  names  of  such  person  or  persons  to 
the  next  magistrate  or  comissioners  of  the  toune  where  such  person  dwell, 
who  shall  send  for  the  party  so  refusing,  and  in  case  he  shall  persist  therein, 
shall  give  order  to  the  counstable  to  levy  the  same.  And  if  any  clarke  of  the 
writts  shall  neglect  his  duty  hereby  injoyned  him,  he  shall  pay  the  following 
poenalty ;  i.  e.,  for  neglect  of  a  yearly  retourne  to  the  County  Court,  five 
pounds,  and  for  neglect  of  retourning  the  name  of  any  person  rctourneable  by 
this  lawe,  whither  borne,  marrjed,  or  dead,  more  then  thirty  dajes  before  his 
retourne  to  the  County  Court,  five  shillings.  And  that  no  future  neglect  may 
be  heerein,  the  recorder  of  each  County  Court  is  hereby  injoyned  from  tjme 
to  tjme  to  certify  the  County  Courts  respectively  the  names  of  all  such  ciarks 
as  shall  neglect  to  make  theire  yearely  retourne  according  to  this  lawe,  who, 
vppon  notice  given,  shall  send  for  such  clarke,  and  deale  in  the  case  accord- 
ing as  lawe  requireth. 

Whereas,  in  all  civill  cases  depending  in  suite,  y"  plaintiff  affirmeth  that 
y^  defendant  hath  donne  him  wrong,  and  accordingly  presents  liis  case  for 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    T5AY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  291 

jucl£;meiit  and  sattisfaccon,  it  behooveth  both  Court  and  jury  to  see  that  the      16  5  7. 
afRrmacbn  be  prooved  by  sufficiieut  e\-ideac,  els  the  case  must  be  found  for  the  '' 

.      .  .  6  May. 

defendant ;  and  so  it  is  also  in  a  criminall  case ;  for,  in  the  eye  of  the  lawe, 
euery  man  is  honest  &  innocent,  vnlesse  it  be  prooved  legally  to  the  contrary. 
All  evidenc  ariseth  ptly  from  matter  of  fact,  and  partly  from  lawe  or  argu- 
ment. The  matter  of  fact  is  alwayes  feazable  to  be  judged  of  as  well  by  the 
jury  as  by  the  Coiut ;  and  concerning  the  lawe,  or  the  point  of  lawe,  in  refer- 
cnc  to  the  case  in  quoestion,  it  is  either  more  easy  &  generally  knoune,  or  Non  liquetts 
more  difficult  to  be  discerned.  The  duty  of  the  jury  is,  if  they  doe  vnder-  Ime'to'^corae. 
stand  the  lawe  to  the  sattisfaction  of  theire  consciences,  not  to  put  it  of  from 
themselves,  but  to  fiude  accordingly  ;  but  if  any  of  the  jury  doth  rest  unsatis- 
fied what  is  lawe  in  the  case,  then  the  whole  jury  haue  liberty  to  present 
a  spcclall  verdict,  viz.,  if  the  lawe  be  so  or  so  in  such  a  point,  wee  finde  for 
the  plaintiffe,  but  if  the  lawe  be  other-wise,  wee  finde  for  the  defendant,  in  w""* 
case  the  determinacon  is  left  to  y"  Court.  And  whereas  the  clause  in  y"  lawe, 
page  thirty  two,  mentioning  evidenc,  is  obscure,  the  jury  may  bring  in  a  non 
licquet,  which  words  hath  occasioned  much  trouble  and  delay  in  civill  proceed- 
ings :  this  Court  doth  heereby  repeale  that  clause,  &  directeth  according  to  what 
is  aboue  expressed  for  the  future. 

♦Whereas    M'    Rich    Russell,    Tresurer,    Capt    Eliazer    Lusher,    &  M'      [*246.] 
Ephraim  Child,  in  October  last,  were  appointed  by  the  Generall  Court  as  a  Comittce  about 

^  '  '  rL  J  Cambndg  vil- 

coiiiittee  to  informe  themselves  more  fully  of  the  estate  of  Cambridge,  and  lagc 
whateuer  els  they  shall  judg  meete,  v,'"^  might  be  necessary  for  this  Court  to 
know,  and  to  make  retourne  thereof  to  this  Coiut,  w"""^  not  taking  effect,  itt  is 
ordered  that  that  order  &  coiiiittee  be  in  force  againe,  &  continew  till  the  next 
session  of  this  Court,  to  v/'^  the  coiiiissioners  aboue  mcnooncd  are  to  make 
theire  retourne. 

Whereas  the  trade  of  fuiTs  w"'  the  Indians  in  this  jurisdiccon  doth  prop-  Trade  w'l'ln- 
perly  belong  to  the  coinonwealth,  and  not  vnto  particcular  person,  who,  w"'out  jj^jipj 
liberty  of  this  Court,  doe  trafficque  w"^  the  Indians  (as  it  may  be  justly  feared) 
seuerall  prohibbited  comoditjes,  as  gunns,  ponder,  shott,  &  strong  licquor,  &(3, 
this  Court  doth  therefore  order  and  declare,  that  no  person  or  persons,  directly 
or  indirectly,  after  the  publication  hereof,  doe  trade  w""  the  Indians  for  any 
sort  of  peltry,  excepting  only  such  as  are  authorized  by  this  Coiut,  or  those 
deputed  by  them,  on  the  poenalty  of  one  hundred  pounds  fine  for  euery  offenc ; 
and  the  Court  doth  hereby  invest  Capt  Daniell  Gookin,  M"'  Richard  Russell, 
Capl  Edward  Johnson,  M""  Edward  Tyng,  M''  Edward  Jackson,  and  M"^  Ed- 
ward Colljns,  or  any  three  of  them,  w""  full  power  to  fiude  out  the  best  way 
and  meanes,  and  to  make  agreement  &  contract  w**"  such  able  &  honest  persons 


292  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


6  May. 


IG  57.      as  sliall  tender  themselves  to  prosecute  the  Indian  trade  for  the  best  bennefitt 

of  the  countrje,  and  suppressing  all  irregularitjes  therein ;   and  it  is  further 

ordered,  that  all  informers  of  the  breach  of  this  order  be  allowed  tenn  pounds 

for  euery  offenc  out  of  delinquents  fines,  and  that  this  order  be  forthwith 

published  by  posting  the  copie  thereof  in  euery  toune. 

No  graunt,  or-  Whereas  it  is  found  by  experienc  that  the  passing  &  enacting  of  dluers 

cas's  befor  it      gi'aunts,  orders,  &  lawes  vpon  the  first  proposall  hath  occasioned  many  incon- 

be  three  days     yeniencjes,  w*  might  haue  binn  prevented  by  mature  deliberation,  and  that  it 

read. 

is  the  laudable  custome  of  the  Parljament  of  England  to  passe  no  bills  which 
haue  not  binn  theire  read  &  debated,  it  is  therefore  ordered  &  enacted  by  this 
Court,  that  no  graunt  of  land,  lawe,  or  order  (except  transcient  acts)  shall 
henceforth  be  of  force  but  such  as,  after  reading  and  mature  consideracon  on 
three  seuerall  dajes,  shallbe  approoved  and  consented  to  by  the  majo"'  part  of 
Magistrates  and  Deputjes. 

Law  phibitting  The  clause  in  y"  lawe  made  in  the  6  month,  1654,  restraining  butchers 

lambs  re-  ^°  ^^^^  rams  or  weather  lambs  vntlU  they  be  two  yeares  old,  vuder  y'=  pceualty 

pealed.  ^f  twenty  shillings,  is  hereby  repealed. 

In  aus"'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Salisbury,  the  Court,  con- 
sidering the  seuerall  orders  of  Court,  and  seuerall  retourncs  of  coiiiittees 
therevppon,  and  both  partjes  being  heard,  judge  that  the  bounds  menconed  iu 
the  id  peticbn  are  not  yett  perfected  &  legally  setled,  forasmuch  as  the  last 
Court  order  refers  to  the  former,  dated  14"^  of  3  m",  56,  w""*"  requires  cxpla- 
nacon,  and  a  true  platt  signed  by  some  artist,  w*^*"  not  yett  being  donne,  the 
worke  is  not  orderly  finished,  nor  the  retournes  fitt  to  be  recorded,  and  doe 
[*247.]      therefore  order  Lef  ?  Jn°  Apleton,  M'  Joseph  *Medcalf,  &  W  W-^  Barthol- 

Courts  ans'  to    mew,  of  Ipswich,  Nicolas  Noyes,  &  Daniell  Pearse,  of  Newbury,  as  coiiiis- 

Salisbiiry  peti-      _  .  ... 

Jon.  sioners,  who  shall  &  hereby  are  impowred  to  act  in  this  case  according  to 

former  orders  of  Court ;  and  whatsoeuer  they,  or  the  major  part  of  them,  shall 
conclude  in  reference  to  the  sajd  bounds  mentioned  in  this  peticon  to  stand 
firme  &  good,  provided  that  Capt  Nicholas  Shapleygh,  of  Charlestoune,  be 
procured  by  the  partjes  to  asist  the  comissioners  in  drawing  out  a  platt,  and 
running  the  lyne  according  to  theire  direction,  the  charge  of  the  coinissioners 
to  be  borne  eequally  by  both  tonnes,  and  the  artist  to  be  pajd  by  Salisbiuy 
only,  and  that  a  true  retourne  be  made  of  what  is  donne  herein  to  y*  next 
session  of  this  Court,  to  be  rattified  &  confirmed. 
Ans' to  M'  In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  M'  Thomas  Gayner,  the  Couit,  considering 

^^nerspe  -  ^-^^  order  of  the  General!  Court,  23"^  of  May,  1651,  whereby  the  peticoner 
is  enabled  to  revejw  his  action  by  virtue  of  his  charter  partje,  although 
cancelled,   judge  meete  to  referr  him  therevnto ;    and  as  for  his  want  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  £93 

estate,  the  Court  judgeth  he  may  take  the  bennefit  of  the  lawe  in  that  case      1657. 
provided.  '       '^       ' 

For  the  better  ordering  &  regulating  of  connstables  watches,  which  in  „      ,  y'  , 

°  °  °  '  Rpgulacon  of 

seuerall  respects  are  found  defective,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  that  henceforth  it  connstables 
shallbe  in  the  power  of  the  select  men  of  each  toune  w'^in  this  jurisdiccon,  or 
the  majo"'  pt  of  them,  to  order  &  dispose  of  the  sajd  watches,  both  respecting 
tjme,  place,  noumber,  qualitje  of  persons,  and  what  els  may  conduce  there- 
vuto,  so  as  to  them  shall  seeme  most  meete. 

In  ans'  to   the   peticbn  of   the  inhabitants  of  Chelmsford,  craving  the  Ans'  to 
reniittment  of  the  fines  imposed  by  lawe    on  them    for    theire  not  attend-  pet^jon  "q. 
anc  to  y"  pformance  of  the  lawe  the  last  yeare,  &  this  also,  for  nomination  *'"^^- 
of  magistrates,  the   Court  judgeth  meete  to   rcmitt   all   the   fines  to  twenty 
shillings. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticfin  of  John  Sternes,  counstable,  of  Billirrikey,  humbly  Ans' to  Jn» 
craving  the  reniittment  of  the  fyne  the  lawe  imposeth  on  liim  for  neglecting  ^^"^''^  ^^ '" 
to  warne  y"  freemen  of  y'  place  to  attend  the  lawe  for  nomination  of  magistrates 
the  last  yeare,  the  Court,  considering  the  freemen  are  few,  y''  peticoner  hath 
put  himself  to  travaile,  beslds  the  charge  of  entring  his  peticon,  doe  reraitt 
his  fine. 

Whereas  the  lands  &  propertjes  of  the  honnored  Capt  Wiggins  hath  not  Cap'  Wiggins 
hitherto  binn  brought  w"'in  the  Ijniitts  of  any  toune,  nor  biun  liable  to  pay  jyabie  to  as- 
taxes  &  assessments,  as  other  the  honored  magistrates  haue  donnc,  it  is  there-  s^ssments,  &c, 

at  Hampton. 

fore  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  henceforth  the  now  dwelling  howse  of  the 
sajd  Capt  Wiggin,  together  w"*  the  lands  and  proprietjes  therevnto  appertayn- 
Ing,  shall  belong  to  the  towne  of  Hampton,  and  by  the  selectmen  of  the  sajd 
toune  to  be  assessed  in  all  rates,  according  to  lawe,  any  custome  or  vsage  to 
the  contrary  notwithstanding,  &  y'  for  the  tjme  past  he  allow  only  the  some 
of  five  pounds  to  the  publicke  treasury. 

*0n  the  mocon  about  Thomas  Wests  bm-glary,  which  was  not  issued,  but      [*248.] 
he  standing  bound  ouer  to  Salem  Court,  this  case  is  referd  to  Salem  Court  Wests  case  re- 

ferd  to  Salem 

next,  who  are  heereby  impowred  to  heare  and  determine  the  same.  Court,  deter- 

M"'  Humphry  Chadborne,  being  farre  remote,  &  having  now  an  oppor-  ' 

^      •'  '  o  >  a  fi/         M'Chadboms 

tunity  to  haue  a  passage  home  by  water,  &  the  Coiurt  being  neere  ready  to  be  dismission. 
adjourned,  on  his  request,  is  dismist  from  his  further  attendanc  on  the  service 
of  the  Court. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Anne  Bate,  itt  is  ordered,  y'  Lydia  Bucke  be  County  Courts 
forthwith  safely  convejed    back  againe  to   Hingham  at  the  charge  of  them  Burke^con-^ 
that  cawsed  hir  to  be  brought  from  thenc,  and  that  the  select  men  of  Hing-  fi™'''- 
ham  take  care  to  provide  for  the  sajd  auld  ^  ,  according  to  tJie  order  of  the 


6  May. 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

County  Court  formerly  to  them  directed,  w'^''  if  tlie  select  men  aforesajd,  in  be- 
halfe  of  the  sajd  toune,  shall  further  neglect,  they  may  expect  the  displeasure 
of  this  Court. 


18  November,  Wee,  whose   names  are  heerevnder  subscribed,  being  apointed  by  the 

Generall  Courts  of  the  Massachusetts  and  New  Pljmouth  to  settle  a  difference 
betweene  the  tounes  of  Hingham  and  Scittuate,  referring  to  sixty  acres  of  salt 
marish  graunted  to  the  Massachusetts,  lying  on  the  east  side  of  the  Riuer 
Conehasset,  and  in  obedience  to  the  sajd  order  niett  accordingly  vpon  the 
place,  and  vppon  a  survey  of  the  sajd  land,  could  not  flude  any  bound  marke 
appearing  according  as  it  was  sett  out  by  Hingham  men,  but  vnderstood  that 
Lands  ab'  Hingham  men  had  riinne  the  Ijne  a  little  higher  vpon  the  riuer  then  Scittuate 
seticd.  "^^1^  ^^^^  donne,  and  thereby  had  taken  six  or  seven  acres  of  land  vpon  the 

riuer,  which  Scittuate  men  had  lajd  out  neere  the  sea,  w"^*"  wee  conceive  was 
not  so  agreeable  to  the  coinissioners  order  as  the  first  lyne,  and  doe  therefore 
conclude  and  agree,  as  a  full  issue  of  the  case,  that  the  sajd  lyne,  as  it  now 
stands  marked  and  bounded  by  Scittuate  men,  shall  stand  firme  and  good,  and 
the  other  Ijne  runne  by  Hingham  men  to  be  vojd  and  of  none  effect. 

WILLJAM   TORREY, 
JOSIAS   WINSLOW. 

The  Coiu't  approoves  of  the  retourne  of  the  coinissioners  aboue  exprest 
in  referenc  to  y'  land.  _ 

Secretary  ap-  Whereas  this  Court  is  informed  that  there  is  a  matter  of  seventeene 

ne'"to  sue  °'^'    pounds  w"'holden  by  Richard  Woodey  from  this  jurisdiccon  by  occasion  of 

Rkh.  Woodey,  ijome  transaccou  about  the  Indians,  concernuig  w*  there  hath  passed  some  ac- 

counts  w""  the  coinissioners  of  the  colonjes,  for  the  recouery  whereof  this 

Court  hath  and  hereby  doth  empower  M''  Edward  Rawsoii,  secretary,  to  be 

attorney  in  behalf  of  this  jurisdiccon,  and  to  prosecute  the  suite  to  effect. 

[*24:9.]  *Wee,  whose  names  are  subscribed,  according  to  an  order  and  grauut 

Courts  confir-    made  by  the  Generall  Coiut,  held  at  Boston,  Octob  14,  1656,  haue  lajd  out 

macon  of  M"  c   i       n      i    •  i    x^ 

NoweUs  land  to  M"^  Parnell  Nowell  one  thousand  acres  of  land,  Ijing  beyond  Douer 
lajd  out,  &c.  ijojjj^fig  Qi^  tjjg  northwest,  &  lyeth  vpon  the  Cochecho  Riuer,  on  both  sides 
thereof,  begining  on  the  north  east  side  of  a  brooke  that  runneth  into  the 
sajd  riuer  on  the  north  Avest  side  of  Scohomogomocks  Hill,  lately  planted 
by  Indians,  and  lying  two  miles  in  length,  vp  streame,  vpon  the  sajd  riuer,  and 
half  a  mile  in  Ijreadth  ;  also,  on  the  southwest  side  of  the  sajd  riuer,  begining 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW  ENGLAND.  295 


6  May. 


at  a  pine  tree,  marked,  standing  anent  the  aforesajd  Scohomogomocke  Hill,      1657. 
and  from  thence  running  southwest  three  quarters  of  a  mile,  and  in  length, 
vp  streame,  one  mile  and  a  halfe,  and  at  the  vpper  end  of  the  sajd  lyne  lying 
in  breadth  from  the  riuer  halfe  a  mile,  being  parralell  to  the  lower  lyne. 

Also,  lajd  out  vnto  M'^  Saniuell  Nowell  one  thousand  acres,  lying  on  y" 
south  and  cast  side  of  the  aforesajd  Scohomogomocke  Hill,  and  is  bounded  with 
the  wilderness  land  annent  the  great  pine  swamp  on  the  north  east  side 
thereof,  and  so  continewed  betweene  that  and  Chochecho  Riuer  towards  Douer 
bounds,  the  which  south  east  Ijne  wee  could  not  cleerly  determine,  becawse 
Douer  bounds  is  as  yett  vnlajd  out. 

Given  vnder  our  hands,  Ap""  28,  1657. 

THOMAS   DANFORTH, 

ROBERT   HALE. 

The  Coui-t  accepts  of  this  retourne  of  the  coiiiissioners  in  reference  to  the 
lands  therein  menconed. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticbn  of  Samuell  Cole  and  Cap?  James   Johnson,  ad-  Ans'  to  M' 
ministrators  to  y^  estate  of  Edmond  Grosse,  humbly  craving  power  from  this  johnsons^neti- 
Court  to  sell  the  two  thirds  of  the  howse  and  land  belonging  to  the  children  ^"' 
of  y'*  sajd  Grosse,  ffor  y"  better   enabling  of  them  to  pay  his  debts  and  sett 
forth  the  Sd  children,  being  smale,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  them 
theire  request,  &  hereby  impowres  them  to  make  a  good  sayle  of  the  sajd  two 
third  parts  of  the  howse  accordingly. 

In  the  case  of  Henry  Farneham   ag'  Lawrence  Douse,  counstable    of  Courts  judgm« 
Charles  Tonne,  the  last  County  Court  &  jury  not  agreeing  in  y"  verdict,  '"  ^''™''"^^ 
after  a  full  hearing  of  the  case  and  all  the  evidences  produced,  the  Court 
found  for  the  plaintifFe  thii-ty  thi-ee  shillings  &  sixepence  damage  &  costs,  and 
his  bond  retoumed. 

In  the  case  of  Seaborne  Batchiler,  now  Cromwell,  bound  ouer  by  the  Courts  judgm' 
Court  of  Assistants  for  coinitting  ffolly  w"'  Ezekiell  Euerell,  being  with  child  Ba^^ne™ 
by  him  &  marrying  w"»  Jn°  Cromwell,  &  not  discoQring  the  same  to  him,  w"^''  <^»s<=- 
she  confest,  the  whole  Court,  having  heard  the  case,  sentenced  hir  to  be  whipt 
w""  twenty  stripes  the  next  fifth  day  after  lecture,  Ezekiell  Everell  hauing 
binn  sentenced  in  y  last  County  Court. 

M'^  Thomas  Danforth,  of  Cambridge,  and  M'  Robert  Hale,  of  Charles  M'  Noweiis 
Toune,  are  appointed  as  coinissioners  to  lay  out  the  land,  being  three  thousand  ^fi"  ■d"o*'ut*'' 
two  hundred  acres  of  land  graunted  by  the  Generall  Court,  22  3  m",  1650, 
to  y»  executors  of  y"  last  will  of  M"'  Isack  Johnson  to  M"^  Increase  Nowells 


296 


THE  RECOEDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


[*250.] 

Ans'  to  M'  Al- 
cocks  pcticon. 


Courts  graunt 
of  500  ac.  to 
M'  Chauncey. 


Ans'  to  Lan- 
caster peticou. 


Ans'  to  fferry 
mens  peticon. 


Ans'  to  Eliza- 
beth Jacksons 
peticon. 


execcuto''s,  according  to  the  graunt,  provided  the  tenn  pounds  due  to  the  conntiy 
from  the  executo'^s  of  y*  sajd  M'  Nowell  be  first  pajd  to  the  conntrje  Tresurer, 
or  securitje  given  for  the  same. 

*In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  M"'  John  Alcocke,  for  the  confirmacoii  &  this 
Courts  acceptation  of  the  eight  hundred  forty  two  acres  of  vpland  &  meadow, 
w'^'',  according  to  this  Courts  graunt  in  fiuety  six,  is  returned  as  lajd  out  by  a 
plott,  together  with  a  two  hundred  acres  more,  as  is  expressed  in  the  sajd  jDlott, 
for  all  yr"^  he  hath  compounded  w"'  the  native  Indjans  and  nerest  inhabittants 
betwixt  Naticke  &  Wippsuiferage,  who  are  sattisfied  herewith,  the  Court  ac- 
cepts &  approoves  of  the  retourne  menconed  in  the  plott  annext  to  the  peticon, 
&  graunt  the  peticoners  request,  so  as  it  hinder  no  former  graunt. 

This  Court  doth  graunt  to  M''  Charles  Channcey,  preesident  of  Harvard 
Colledg,  five  hundred  acres  of  land,  to  be  lajd  out,  in  any  place  not  formerly 
graunted  by  this  Court,  by  Edward  Goffe  &  Ensign  Jn"  Sherman. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Lancaster,  this  Court  judgeth 
it  meete  to  graunt  theire  request,  &  doe  therefore  order  and  appoint  Majo' 
Symon  Willard,  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  and  M'  Thomas  Danforth  coinis- 
sioners,  impowring  them  to  order  the  affaires  of  the  sajd  Lancaster,  and  to 
heare  and  determine  theire  seuerall  greivances  and  differences  w'^''  obstructs 
the  present  and  future  good  of  the  toune,  standing  in  power  till  they  be  able 
to  make  retourne  to  y'  Generall  Court,  that  the  toune  is  sufficijently  able  to 
order  its  oune  affaires  according  to  lawe. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Frauncls  Hudson  &  Jn"  Burrage,  in  referenc  to 
regulacon  of  payments  to  y"  fferry  at  Charlestoune,  the  Court  declares  that,  for 
sure  payment,  the  law  already  in  force,  dated  anno  16-18,  provides  sufficijent- 
ly for  y'  case,  and  orders  that,  in  case  of  change  of  money,  this  country  coyne 
being  not  in  smaler  peeces  then  sixpenc  and  three  pence,  it  shall  not  be  lawfuU 
for  any  passenger  to  refuse  to  receave  one  penny  or  two  pence  ia  good  peage, 
to  make  theire  change  more  easy  &  ready ;  that  connstables  in  all  cases  shall 
pay  for  theire  oune  passages,  and  for  such  as  are  or  shallbc  implojed  in  pub- 
licke  service  by  authoritje  they  shall  bring  w"*  them  a  certifficat  vnder  the 
hands  of  them  by  whom  they  are  implojed,  w"''  shall  be  pajd  by  the  Tresurer 
of  the  countrje  or  county,  according  to  order  exjJst  in  y^  certifficat,  to  wliich 
Tresurer  it  propperly  belongs. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Elizabeth  Jackson,  humbly  craving  the  remitt- 
ment  of  a  fine  of  one  hundred  pounds,  imposed  by  the  County  Court  at  Ips- 
wich for  neglecting  the  probate  of  hir  former  husband  Hugh  Chaplins  will 
twenty  months,  w"*"  shee  affirmes  to  be  only  through  ignorance  of  y*  law  in 
y'  case,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  refferr  the  modderating  of  y'  ffine  y" 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  .£97 

peticSner  hath  incurred  to  the  next  County.  Court  at  Ipswich,  as  they  in  theire      16  57. 
discretion  shall  judgmeete  ;  and  it  is  ordered  that  the  party  y'  ought  to  proove    """"^     ~' 
the  will  appeare  before  the  sajd  Coiut;  .   ^ 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  John  Truinble,  the  Court' judgeth  it  meete  to  Ans'toJn» 
referr  the  moderating  of  the  fine  the  pcticoner  incurred  by  his  neglect  in  not  j-''""'  ^^P®' 
taking  administracon  to  y"  estate  of  his  wifes  former  husband  to- the. nexfr 
County  Court  at  Ipswich,  as  they  in  theire  discretion  shall' judge  meete. 

*In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Martyn  Stebbin,  humbly  desiring  liberty.  &      r*2.51.] 
license  to   brew  &  sell  strong  beere,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  deny  his  Ans'  to  Martin 

Stebbins  peti- 

request.  Eon. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Cleoment  Grosse,  humbly  craving  liberty  to  Ana'  to  Clem. 
brew  strong  beer  &  sell  it,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  his  request. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Fermon  Hadden,  the  Court  having  spoken  w*''  Ans'  to  Fer- 
M"'  Bratle,  one  of  the  selectmen  of  Charlestoune,  who  informed  the  selectmen  peticon. 
had  rec'*  &  ouned  the  order  of  the  last  County  Court  at  Boston  in  y°  case, 
whereby  what  y*  peticoner  desii'es  is  setled  and  provided  for. 

In  aus'^  to  the  peticSn  of  John  Jephson,  the  Court,  vnderstanding  that  the  Ans'  to  Jep- 
peticoner,  having  made  a  cleere   &  full  contract  w"'  the  ouerseers  of  Cap? 
Tings  estate,  judg   it  his   duty,  therefore,  to  beare  what  burden  Providenc 
shall  lay  on  him,  or  if  otherwise  he  could  haue  ease,  his  way  is  to  make  his 
addresse  to  the  toune  of  Boston. 

In  answer  to  the  petictiu  of  Nicholas  Davison,  in  behalf  of  Doctor  Which-  Ans'  to  M'  Da- 
cott  and  Rebeckah,  his  wife,  the  whole  Court  having  beared  what  M"^  Davison  j„  behalf  of 
could  say,  &  on  pervsall  of  the  accompts,  they  voted,  that  the  former  answer  Hj!^.*""^ 
given  by  the  Generall  Court  to  M''  Davisons  peticSn  of  the  like  nature,  bear-  &c. 
ing  date  the   15"^  of  October,  sixteene   hundred  and   fiucty,  should  be  the 
answer  to  his  peticon  now  presented  to  this  Court. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  INIathias  Ines,  humbly  desiring  the  remittment  Ans'  to  Ines 
of  a  fine  of  five  pounds  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court  for  sufiering  a 
man  to  be  druncke,  &  not  sending  for  a  couustable,  as  y°  lawe  requires,  the 
Court  sees  no  cawse  to  remitt  his  fine. 

In  answer  to  the  peticSn  of  M"'  Samuell  Mauericke,  humbly  craving  the  Ans'  to  M' 
remittment  of  the  forfeiture  of  his  bond  of  twenty  pounds,  w"*"  he  stood  bound  tiSon. 
for  Doctor  Hogsflesh,  the  Court  graunts  his  request. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  Portsmouth,  it  is  ordered,  Ans'  to  Ports- 

,.  ■-^/'i  i-  r  •    •  11  •!  mouth  peticon, 

in  ans"^  to  this  peticon  tor  the  setting  oi  a  minister,  as  .also  the  meeting  howse  ^g. 
at  Portsmouth,  and  for  prevention  of  further  inconveniencjes  touching  the 
same,  that  the  peticoners  nominate  and  choose  one  man,  the  rest  of  the  in- 
habitants another,  and  the  County  Court  at  Douer  a  third,  who  are  heereby 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  38 


298 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


Ans'  to  Boston 
pet. 

Lyne  be- 
tweene  Charls 
Toune,  Lyn,  & 
Boston. 


[*252.] 

Ans'  to  Hen. 

Sherborns  pe- 
ticon  ab'  Gib- 
bjns  will. 


Coniission  for 
Yorke,  &c. 


authorized  to  goe  on  the  place,  and  to  heaie  what  on  both  sides  shallbe  al- 
leadged  in  the  premises,  and  determine  the  same  as  they  shall  judg  best  con- 
ducing to  the  peace  &  welfare  of  the  toune ;  and  in  case  the  partjes  shall 
refuse  to  proceed  to  choose  as  above  is  exprest,  then  it  is  referred  to  the  sajd 
County  Court  at  Douer  to  make  such  order  therein  as  the  shall  judg  best 
conducing  to  that  end,  &  cawse  retourne  to  be  made  to  the  next  Court. 

In  ans"^  to  a  petition  from  the  inhabitants  of  Boston  for  laying  out  the 
bounds  betweene  Boston  &  Lynne,  it  is  ordered,  that  Leift  Joshua  Fisher,  of 
Dedham,  or  whom  els  they  should  appoint,  shallbe  &  is  hereby  appointed  to 
lay  out  the  sajd  bounds,  &  to  runne  a  north  north  west  Ijne  into  the  country 
from  the  middle  of  Brides  Brooke,  ueere  to  the  ffoote  path,  to  be  rimne  by  a 
meridian  compas,  the  propriety  of  any  lands  layd  out  to  the  inhabitants  of 
Lynne  being  not  disturbed,  according  to  agreement. 

*In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Henry  Sherborne,  who,  for  reasons  exprest 
in  the  peticon,  renounceth  Iris  execcutorshipp,  which  this  Court  doth  allow  and 
approove  of,  and  graunts  administracon  to  the  estate  of  the  sajd  Ambrose  Gib- 
ons  to  the  sajd  Henry  Sherborne,  and  orders,  that  after  the  debts  of  the  sajd 
Gibbins  is  sattisfied,  that  Samuell  Sherborne,  his  sonne,  shall  have  a  double 
porcbn,  and  the  rest  of  that  estate  be  sequally  distribbuted  amongst  the  rest  of 
the  children ;  and  this  Court  doth  heereby  further  impower  the  sajd  Henry 
Sherborne  to  sell  and  make  a  good  title  to  the  howse  and  lands  of  the  sajd 
Gibbins,  to  whom  he  shall  sell  the  same. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  M''  Symon 
Bradstreet,  Capt  Thomas  Wiggin,  Capt  Daniell  Dennison,  &  Majo'  Gen' 
Danj:  Dennison,  w""  the  rest  of  the  coiiiissioners  y'  are  appointed  to  keepe  the 
County  Courts  of  Yorke,  Douer,  &  Hampton  on  the  dajes  appointed  by  lawe, 
and  at  theire  being  at  Yorke  whiles  M'  Bradstreet  or  Majo"'  Dennison  be  there 
according  to  the  comission  and  instruccous  which  the  former  coinissioners 
receaved  from  the  honnored  Gen'  Court,  when  the  former  easterne  inhabitants 
were  tooke  in,  that  so  they  not  only  take  in  such  as  are  w"'in  our  Ijmitts 
vnder  this  gouermnent,  but  also  to  appoint  and  setle  them  in  such  a  way  of 
goiinment,  w""  comissioners,  connstables,  &  other  officers,  as  they  may  be 
enabled  to  preserve  the  peace  and  defend  themselves  from  tumult,  and  setle 
due  ministrje  amongst  them,  that  they  may  live  according  to  God,  vnder  such 
ordinances  they  are  capable  of;  and  further,  that  the  sajd  coinissioners  take 
a  due  and  effectuall  course  for  the  bringing  in  of  Jn°  Bonnighton  to  a  due 
trjall  at  Boston  for  his  abusiue  carriages  &  speeches  against  this  goQnment, 
and  that  they  proporcon  each  of  the  tounes  in  those  parts  to  pay  the  seven- 
teene  pounds  teim  shillings  for  time  past  &  time  to  come. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  299 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  all  lawcs  of  publicke  concernment  not      1657. 
yett  printed  be  forthwith  transcribed  by  y"  secretary,  and  sent  to  the  presse  to    "^       '        ' 
be  printed  at  the  publicke  charge,  y"  printer  to  be  pajd  by  the  Tresurer.  .  , 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Boreman  for  liberty  to  build  a  bridge  printed. 
over  a  creeke  about  his  farme,  y'  in  consideracon  of  his  building  a  bridg  so  ^^^^  netiEon' 
necessary,  he  might  be  exempted  from  county  rates,  and  y'  such  as  make  vse 
of  y®  sd  bridg,  &  not  contribute  to  y^  same,  they  might  be  Ijable  to  such  charge 
as  this  Court  shall  determine,  &6,  the  Court  doth  not  judge  it  nieete  to  exempt 
the  peticoner  from  rates,  but  judg  it  aequall  that  none  make  vse  thereof,  ex- 
cept it  be  by  the  allowanc  of  the  peticoner,  or  making  contract  w"'  him. 

*The  counstables  of  Braintrje  and  Weimouth  being  defective  in  making      r*253.] 
theire  retournes  of  y'  chojce  of  deputjes  for  theire  seuerall  touncs,  as  the  lawe  Braintry  & 

1       /->  1     •  o    1         •  1  1  Weimouth 

requires,  the  Court,  on  theire  appearance,  &  hearing  what  they  had  to  pleade  counstables 
for  favor,  it  is  ordered,  that  they  pay  only  five  shillings,  the  counstables  of    ""^    ^'' 
each  toune. 

The  answer  of  the  Geuerall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts  to  the  mocon  or 
request  of  Wequaganoag,  sach  of  Narraganset,  Weto  Washaljmassepeteah 
PecompI,  Sachem  Wampquamenet,  Sach  Warquaquetuisquoauc,  for  liberty  or 
cur  consent  to  make  warre  vpon  Vncus,  sachem  of  the  Mohiggins,  the  Court 
acknowledgeth  the  freindship  of  the  Narragansetts,  Pocompticks,  &  Maoake 
in  many  of  the  particulars  mentioned,  which  they  haue  euer  answered  w* 
like  love  &  freindship,  &  haue  neuer  donne  them  nor  any  of  theire  people 
any  wrong  or  injury  since  theire  coming  hither,  and  desire  that  loue  &  peace 
may  be  continued  betwixt  them  &  the  succeeding  generations.  2^^.  The 
Court  likes  well  theire  present  addresse  to  the  English,  before  there  be  any 
further  ingagement  w""  Vncus,  &  should  haue  taken  it  more  acceptably  if  they 
had  donne  the  like  formerly.  3'^.  Considering  the  diiferenc  betwixt  Vncus  &  y* 
Pocompticke  Indians,  as  the  Court  doth  not  fully  vnderstand  the  ground  of  it, 
as  not  having  heard  both  partjes  together,  so  vppon  what  they  haue  heard  they 
are  apt  to  thinke  Vncus  maybe  in  fault,  which,  if  it  appeard  to  be  so  vppon 
due  hearing,  the  English  will  not  excuse  or  countenance  him  therein ;  but  Courts  ans'  to 
seing  the  Pocompticke  Indjans  haue  had  so  great  a  victory  ouer  him,  &  kild  ^^tt  Indians 
so  many  of  his  men,  the  Court  thinks  they  may  well  rest  sattisficd,  and  doe 
desire  there  maybe  no  further  proceeding  in  way  of  hostlllitje  till  the  comis- 
sioners  for  the  seuerall  colonjes  haue  heard  and  judged  the  case,  who  are  to 
meete  at  Boston  about  fower  months  hence,  and  are  deputed  by  all  the  English 
to  heare  and  end  all  differences  amongst  the  Indians  that  are  in  freindship  w'*" 
them,  which  if  yow  will  promise  to  doe,  they  will  forthwith  require  Vncus  to 
forbeare  toy  assault  ^  yo'selves  or  freinds,  and  doe  expect  hee  will  doe  accord- 


300 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1657. 


6  May. 


[*254.] 

About  Chas- 
mores  rescue. 


ingly.  4'y.  As  for  the  mocon  of  the  Narrow  Gansetts  for  liberty  to  aide  the 
Pocomptick  or  Mowaks  Indians  against  Vncus,  the  Court  cannot  by  any 
meanes  assent  vnto,  much  lesse  vpon  any  such  old  &  offencive  ground  as  was 
mentioned,  and  which  the  dead  sachem  of  the  Narrow  Gansett,  at  the  last 
meeting  of  the  comissioners  at  Pljmouth,  did  openly  professe  before  many 
sachems  and  others  to  throwe  a  way,  as  he  sajd,  and  foreuer  to  forgett,  and 
for  any  late  and  new  injurjes  or  affronts  that  Vncus  may  haue  donne  or  offered, 
the  coiiiissioners  at  theire  next-  meeting  willbe  ready  to  heare,  &  cawse  due 
sattisfaccon,  if  the  case  rec[uire' it,  to  be  given.-  The  Court  takes  notice  that 
yow  are  mindfull  of  yo''  couenant  made  w"*  the  coinissioners  at  Boston,  anno 
45,  which  is  twelve  yeares  agoe,  not  to  warre  w"'  any  Indians  that  are  in 
freindship  w"'  the  English  w"'out  the  consent  of  the  coinissioners,  and  there- 
fore like  well  your  coming  for  advice  in  so  great  a  case  that  may  so  deepely 
conceme  both  yow  &  themselves,  yett  cannot  consent  to  yo'  mocon,  but  doe 
require  you,  according  to  yo'  couenant,  &  as  yow  desire  the  continuance  of 
theire  freindshipp,  to  forbeare  any  hostile  attempt  against  Vncus  or  any  other 
Indians  in  freindship  w"*  them,  till  yow  haue  liberty  from  y"  comissioners  of 
the  colonjes  so  to  doe,  to  whose  next  meeting  they  further  referr  you  for  finall 
resolution  in  all  cases  of  differences  betwixt  yo'selves  c&  him  or  any  others. 

*The  Court,  having  read  &  considered  the  seuerall  letters  &  papers  refer- 
ring to  the  rescue  of  Chasmore,  of  Pawtuxit,  judge  it  necessary  to  vindicate 
our  just  right  of  judicature  ouer  them,  and  that  wee  should  not  in  silenc  passe 
ouer  the  affront  offered  to  the  marshall  and  those  that  were  w"'  him  by  the  men 
of  Providence,  and  though  wee  signifie  to  the  prsesident  our  good  acceptance 
of  his  readines  to  aply  himself  to  what  may  conduce  to  wajes  of  peace  & 
righteousnes,  yet  that  wee  also  lett  him  vnderstand  our  deepe  sence  of  the 
injui-y  donne  vs  in  preventing  vs  in  the  prosecution  of  justice  against  delin- 
quents, desiring  the  sajd  praesident  to  consider  of  some  way  for  giving  due 
sattisfaccon  to  vs  in  doing  justice  on  such  persons  as  vpon  examination  shall  be 
found  guilty,  according  to  the  merrit  of  the  facts,  that  so,  justice  having  a  ffree 
course  amongst  vs,  peace  and  amitje  maybe  majntajned  betweene  the  two  jiuis- 
diccons.  And  it  is  hereby  desired,  y'  o'  present  honnored  Gouerno'  &  Dep'y 
Goiln''  would,  by  letter,  w"'  all  convenient  speede,  lett  the  sajd  prsesident 
•vnderstand  the  Courts  pleasure  heerein. 


M'  Hubbards  Wee,  whose  names  are  heerevnder  written,  being  appointed  by  the  Gen- 

grauntlajd       ^^.^^j  ^^^^^^  j^^j^  ^^  Boston  the  Ib^"  of  October,  1656,  to  lay  out  to  M'  W" 

Hubbard,  of  Ipswich,  senio'',  one  thousand  acres  of  land  in  any  place  or  places 

beyond  Exiter  Riuer,  east  or  north  east,  haue  accordingly  lajd  out  the  sajd 


6  May 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  301 

land  as  followeth :  viz.,  vpon  the  north  side  of  Quochecha  Riuer,  about  eight     1  G  5  7. 

or  nine  miles  from  the  mills,  as  wee  judg,  the  noumber  of  eight  hundi'ed  & 

ninety  acres  in  a  pine  swampe,  begining  at  the  westermost  end  of  the   sajd 

swampe,  at  a  great  red  oake  marked  on  fower  sides,  &  from  thence  eighty 

rods,  east  &  by  south,  to  a  great  white  pine  tree  vpon  the  westermost  end  of  a 

great  old  Indian  feild,  and  from  thence  along  the  same  Ijne  through  the  sajd 

feild  three  hundred  and  twenty  rod  to  a  great  pine  tree  marked  on  fower 

sides,  and  from  thence  vpon  a  north  east  Ijne  two  hundi-ed  and  forty  rods  to 

a  great  pine  tree  vpon  the  top  of  a  hill,  marked  on  fower  sides,  and  from 

thence   west   and  by  north   three   hundred   and   twenty  rod   to   a  red   oake 

marked  on  fower  sides,  and  from  thence  three  hundred  and  twenty  rod  to  the 

-first  marked  red  oake,  and  vpon  the  eastmost  end  of  the  aforesajd  divicon 

two  hundi'ed  rod  square  vpon  each  corner,  bounded  w""  a  great  pine  tree 

marked  on  fower  sides  ;  and  the  remajnder  of  the  thousand  acres  lajd  out 

in  two  smale  parcels  of  land  on  both  sides  of  the  riuer,  that  on  the  north 

side  conteyning  about  seventy  acres,  bounded  w*  the  riuer  &  a  great  hem- 

locke  tree  markt  vpon  fower  sides  w"'  a  T  &  a  W,  &  three  pine  trees,  and 

a  litle  white  oake,  all  the  trees  markt  on  fower  sides,  that  parcell  of  land  on 

the  south  side,  about  forty  acres,  bounded  w*""  the  riuer  and  two  pine  trees,  a 

hemlocke  &  beech,  all  the  trees  markt  on  fower  sides ;  these  two  latter  parcels 

lying  about  three  or  fower  miles  from  the  mills,  vpon  Quochecho  Riuer,  as 

we  suppose  ;  all  the  sajd  parcells  conteyning,  as  appeares,  a  thousand  acres. 

Dated  y^  28'"  of  Aprill,  1657. 

SAMUELL  HALL, 
THOMAS  BRADBURY. 

The  whole  Court  mett  together  15""  May,  1657.  By  theire  vote  they  15  May. 
allowed  &  approoved  of  the  eight  hundred  &  ninety  acres  in  a  pine  swampe, 
as  aboue  is  exprest,  lajd  out  to  M''  W™  Hubbard  and  to  his  heires  for  euer  j 
and  for  the  hundred  &  tenn  acres  exprest  in  the  retourne,  it  was  voted  to  be- 
long to  y*  secretaiy,  Edward  Rawson,  &  therefore  he  is  at  his  liberty  to  lay 
so  much  as  compleats  that  graunt,  according  to  the  sajd  graunt. 

*Wee,  whose  names  are  vnder  written,  being  appointed  by  the  Generall      [*255.] 
Court  to  lay  out  two  hundred  acres  of  land  for  M''  Edward  Rawson,  secretary,  ^"'^  '^""^  '^J'^ 

ou*  &  con- 

haue  donne  accordingly,  as  followeth  :  on  the  east  side  of  Quochecho  Riuer  firmed  to  Ed- 
wee   haue   ordered  one   hundred   acres,  begining  at  a  beech   tree   neere  the 
riuer,  marked  as  in  the  margent,  and  from  thenc  to  runne  northward  fower 
score  rod,  and  from  the  marked  tree  eastward   two  hundred  rods,  and  one 


302  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

hundred  acres  on  the  west  side  the  riuer,  a  little  below  the  Indian  path,  begin- 
ing  at  a  white  pyne  marked  as  aforesajd,  and  from  thence  to  runne  southward, 
but  could  not  further  determine  vntill  Doner  hath  layd  out  theire  bounds. 
The  above  path  lyeth  about  three  miles  aboue  Peter  Cofyns  house.  Dated 
this  4"»  May.      P  vs, 

BRYAlSr   PENDLETON, 
PETER   COFFYN. 

The  whole  Court,  mett  together  15*^  of  May,  1657,  by  theire  generall 
vote,  allowed  and  approoved  of  the  two  hundred  acres  so  lajd  out,  as  aboue 
sajd,  to  y"  sajd  Edward  Rawson  and  his  heircs  foreuer. 

Ans'  to  Sam.  In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Samuell  Bennett,  humbly  craving  the  reniitt- 

enne  s  pe  i-  jjjgjjj.  ^^  abatement  of  a  fine  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court  for  selling 
goods  at  excessive  prizes,  the  Coiu't,  hauing  pervsed,  and  by  theire  cornittee 
examined,  the  papers  in  this  case  presented,  together  w""  the  allegations  & 
pleas  of  the  peticoner  &  others,  by  him  produced,  vnderstanding,  by  what  ap- 
peared, the  peticoner  received  of  George  Wallis  about  forty  pounds  or  vpwards 
meerely  for  the  release  of  the  bargaine  made  betwixt  them,  all  other  charges 
the  peticoner  was  necessarily  occasioned  thereby  fully  satisfied,  see  it  not  meete 
to  graunt  the  petition  in  whole  or  in  part. 

Ans'  to  George  lu  answer  to  the  petition  of  George  "Wallis,  humbly  craving  the  remitt- 

s  pe  icon,  j-j-jgj^j.  Qj.  abatement  of  a  fine  of  fivety  pounds  imposed  on  him  by  the  County 
Court  for  selling  goods  at  excessive  prizes,  the  Court,  vnderstanding  by  theire 
cornittee  that  the  peticoner  was  necessitated  to  be  at  the  losse  of  about  forty 
pounds,  or  more,  to  attayne  a  release  of  the  bargaine  betwixt  him  &  Samuell 
Bennett,  wherevpon  he  receaved  most  of  the  goods  againe,  judge  meete  to  re- 
mitt  the  fine  all  to  tenn  pounds,  w*  the  peticoner  is  to  pay  for  selling  to 

others  goods  at  excessive  prizes. 

April  24,  1657. 

Eight  thou-  Layd  out  to  the  vse  of  the  inhabitants  of  Billirrilcey  eight  thousand  acres 

land  kid  out  to  °^  ^^T^f^  lying  vpon  Merremacke  Riuer,  on  both  sides  thereof,  taking  in  the 
Billirrikey.  tencking  howse  now  inhabitted  by  Ju"  Cromwell,  the  sajd  land  being  layd  out 
about  sixe  thousand  three  hundred  acres  on  the  east  side  the  riuer,  and  about 
seventeene  hundred  and  fiuety  acres  on  the  west  side  the  sajd  riuer,  and  is 
bounded  by  the  wildernes  surrounding  the  same,  as  is  demonstrated  by  a  plott 
thereof,  taken  and  made  by  Jonathan  Danforth,  survcjor,  and  exhibbited  to 
this  Court, by  Major  Symon  Willard  and  Cap?  Edward  Johnson,  ajipointed  by 
this  Court  Octob  14,  1656,  to  lay  out  the  same. 

SYMON   WILLARD, 
EDWARD   JOHNSON. 


THE    MASSACHUSP:TTS    bay    in    new    ENGLAND.  393 

The  Court  allowes  and  approoves  of  the  retourne  of  these  couiissioners      1657. 
in  reference  to  the  land  heerein  exprest.  "~    '<       ' 

15  May. 

Whereas  Hugh  Gunnison  was  retourncd  by  the  counstable  of  Kittery  to  Hugh  Gunni 
serve  as  a  deputy  of  this  Generall  Court,  and  on  good  informatjon  given  to  chardged. 
this  Court  was  judged  vnmeete  to  be  implojed  in  a  place  of  that  trust,  and 
whereas  the  sajd  Gunnison  hath  also  had  some  power  in  judicijary  proceedings 
and  in  millitary  affaires,  of  all  which  the  Court,  for  seuerall  reasons,  judge 
meet  to  dischargd  the  sajd  Gunnison  therefrom. 

*Capt  Richard  Walderne,  having  vrgent  occasion  to  leave  the  Court,  be-       [*256.] 
ing  to  dispatch  a  ship  for  the  Streights,  on  his  earnest  request  is  dismist.  Capt.  Wai- 

dems  dismis- 

The  Court,  having  considered  of  the  case  of  Nicholas  Norton,  connstable 


sion. 


of  Weimouth,  referring  to  the  losse  he  sustained  in  collecting  the  countrie  Gortons  rec- 

'-^  ^  o  J      ompenc  for 

levy,  know  not  how  in  a  way  of  justice  to  releive  him,  yet,  in  a  way  of  favor,  losse. 
judg  meete  to  exempt  him  from  three  single  countrje  rates. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  present  secretary  shall  and  heereby  is  aiithorized  Secre'  to  pro- 
and  appointed  to  take  due  care  and  cawse  such  meete  and  due  provicons  as  he  comissioners 
shall  judg  necessary  for  the  honnor  of  this  colony  be  made  for  the  entertayn- 
iug  of  the  honnored  coiuissioner  for  the  Vnited  Colonjes,  theire  servants,  &d, 
and  that  the  marshall  generall,  besids  our  coiiiissioners  oune  attendants,  shall 
waite  on  them,  and  sec  that  all  things  are  carrjed  honnorably  &  orderly. 

In .  ans''  to  the  request  of  M"'  Symon  Bradstreete,  that  he  might  haue  M'  Bradstreeta 
liberty  to  take  the  five  hundred  acres  of  land  graunted  vnto  him  at  the  Court  ^j"" 
in  August,  1653,  on  this  side  Conecticott  Riuer,  next  the  two  hundred  acres 
formerly  graunted  him  there,  in  such  place  as  he  may  finde  most  convenient, 
either  below  or  aboue  the  new  toune  that  is  on  the  other  side  the  riuer,  and  to 
agree  or  compound  w"'  the  Indians  for  theire  interest  therein,  if  the  case  so 
require,  the  Court  graunts  his  request,  provided  the  two  hundred  acres  for- 
merly graunted  to  Majo''  Gen'  Daniell  Dennison  take  place  before  this  five 
hundred  acres,  and  that  it  hinder  no  former  graunt. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  M''  Samuell  Symonds,  tliat  he  might  take  Ans'  to  M-  Sy- 
three  hundred  acres  as  part  of  his  former  graunts  by  way  of  exchange,  to  be  quests, 
lajd  out  by  M'  Bradstreets,  on  this  side  Conecticott  Riuer,  and  to  compound 
w""  the    Indians  for    theire  interest  therein,  if  y*  case  doth  so  require,   the 
Court  graunts  his  request,  so  it  hinder  no  former  graunt. 

In  ans'  to  the  request  of  Majo""  Gen  Daniell  Dennison,  the   Court,  in  Major  Denni- 
reference  to  his  service  w"'  other  gent"  implojd  by  this  Court  to  the  eastward,  ^""^ '      ^"^^' 
doe  graunt  him  five  hundred  acres  of  land,  two  whereof  was  formerly  graunted 
him,  &  is  to  take  place  on  Conecticott  Riuer  before  M"'  Symon  Bradstreets 


304 


THE  EECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


1657. 

15  May. 
Edward  Raw- 
eons  200  acres. 


500  acres  a 
peece  to  Capt. 
Gookin  &  Ma- 
jor Willard. 

[*257.] 

500  acres  to 
Rich.  RusseU. 


1000  acres  to 
Jn^  Bndecott, 
Esq.,  GoanC. 


300  acres  to 
M.ijor  VV" 
Uauthorne. 


300  acres  to  M' 
Jobu  Johnson, 
surveyor. 


300  acres  to 
Cap'  Tho. 
Clarke. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Coggans  petl- 
con,  &c. 


flue  hundred,  the  other  three  hundred  acres  to  be  lajd  out  there  or  in  any  other 
place  not  hindering  former  graunts. 

The  Court,  in  referenc  to  y"  secretary  Edward  Rawsons  service  ■w* 
other  gentm°  for  the  eastward,  doe  graunt  vnto  him  two  hundred  acres  more 
of  land,  to  be  lajd  out  vnto  him  besids  w'  was  confirmed  to  him  on  Quochecho 
Riuer,  in  any  place  not  interfering  w""  former  graunts. 

In  ans''  to  the  mocon  of  Majo''  Symon  Willard  and  Capt  Daniell  Gookin, 
in  referenc  to  theire  publick  service  donne,  the  Court  doth  gi'aunt  them  fine 
hundred  acres  of  land  a  peece,  not  ^judicing  former  graunts. 

*M'"  Richard  Russell  having  binn  very  serviceable  to  the  conntrje  in  his 
publicque  imployment  of  Tresurer  for  many  yeares,  for  which  he  hath  had  no 
annuall  stipend,  this  Comt  doth  graunt  him  five  hundred  acres  of  land,  in  any 
place  not  formerly  graunted,  vpon  Nipnop  Riuer,  at  his  choice. 

In  answer  to  the  moc6n  of  Jn"  Endecott,  Es^,  our  present  Gouernor, 
this  Court  doth  graunt  him  one  thousand  acres  of  land,  to  be  lajd  out  vnto 
him  in  any  place  not  pjudicing  former  graunt,  &  is  in  lejw  of  seventy  five 
pounds  by  him  &  his  wife  in  the  generall  adventure. 

In  ans''  to  y'^  mocon  of  JNIajo"^  W'"  Hauthorne,  the  Court,  in  reference  to 
his  service  w""  other  gent"  to  the  eastward,  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  him 
three  hundred  acres  of  land,  in  any  place  to  be  lajd  out  not  pjudicing  former 
graunts. 

M''  John  Johnson  having  binn  long  serviceable  to  y*  countrje  in  the  place 
of  survejo'  generall,  for  w'^''  he  hath  binn  so  farr  from  receiving  due  sattisfac- 
tion  that  it  hath  rather  turned  to  be  ^judiciall  to  his  estate,  w"**  this  Court 
considering  of,  judg  meet  to  graunt  him  three  hundi-ed  acres  in  any  place 
where  he  caun  finde  it  according  to  lawe. 

This  Court  thinks  meete  to  graunt  vnto  Capt  Thomas  Clarke  three  hun- 
dred acres  of  land  on  this  Conecticott  Riuer,  neere  the  lands  lately  graunted 
to  M''  Bradstreet,  M''  Symonds,  &6,  provided  it  hinder  no  former  graunt. 

In  answer  to  the  peticons  of  John  Coggan,  &  Martha,  his  wife,  referring 
to  seuerall  matters  of  account,  and  other  things,  w"''  tjme  will  not  permitt 
this  Coiut  now  to  enter  vpon,  nor  any  necessitie  appearing  which  might  call 
for  present  issue,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  order  and  appointe  Cap? 
Daniell  Gookin,  M''  Richard  Russell,  &  Capt  Ehazer  Lusher  a  coiiiittee.  Cap? 
Daniell  Gookin  to  appoint  time  &  place,  &  impoweres  therein  to  call  all  par- 
tjes  concerned  therein  before  them,  &  on  examination  &  hearing  the  allega- 
tions on  all  sides,  to  make  a  true  representacon  of  what  they  finde  in  the  case 
to  the  next  session  of  this  Coui-t  in  October,  that  it  may  be  determined  as  the 
Court  shall  see  meete. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  305 

Itt  is  orilcicil,  that  ISI'  Thomas  Danforth  and  Robert  Hale  are  &  hereby      16  5  7. 
shallbe  appointed  to  lay  out  the  former  graunt  of  lands  graunted  to  the  lion-    '       ''        ' 

15  Mny. 

nored  Governor,   Jn"   Eudecott,   Es^,   on   Ipswich   Riuer,  making  retourne  comittcc  to 
thereof  to  the  next  Court  if  they  may,  and  that  the  Governor  shall  not  suf-  '''>' ""'  ^ 

Gov'n"  former 

fer  damage  that  it  hath  not  binn  layd  out  formerly.  graunt. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Cap?  Daniell  Gookin,  Majo''  Athcrton,  Majo'  Willard,  Couiittee  to 
&  Caj)?  Edward  Johnson  are  appointed  and  heereby  authorized  us  a  comittee  w"'  difrorcnce  bc- 
fuU  power,  as  the  Gennerall  Court  might  doe,  to  heare  and  determine  all  differ-  '"<""""  *^' 

^  '  o  '  Dunster& 

cnccs  bctweene  M''  Henry  Dunster  and  M"^  Thomas  Danforth,  in  belialfe  of  the  M'  Danforth, 

&  botwccnG  M' 

children  of  M''  Josse  Glouer,  that  Cap?  Gookin  appointe  both  time  and  place,  ounster  &  y« 

Also,  it  is  appointed  and  ordered,  that  the  sajd  comittee  shall  and  hereby  <=''""*i')'<=. 
are  impowred  to  heare  and  determine  all  differences  betweene  the  sajd  Henry 
Dunster  and  the  country  in  reference  to  his  accompts,  the  secretary  being  ap- 
pointed in  behalfe  of  the  countrje   to  make   all   due   objections   against  his 
accompts. 

It  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  the  lawe  in  reference  to  the  howse  Order  ab' 
of  correction  &  punishing  offenders  in  the  sajd  lawe  exprest,  made  May,  1656,  section  &C 
be  &  continew  in  force  till  the  Court  shall  take  further  order.  ""^^^  ^^''J'' 

16o6,  con- 

*ltt  is  ordered,  that  the  admlnlstrato'^s  to  the  estate  of  David  Selecke  shall  firmed. 
&  hei-eby  are  inipowered  to  sell  the  house  and  lands  belonging  heretofore  to      [  ~58.] 
v°  sd  David  Sellecke,  to  sattisfy  the  creddlto'^s,  the  thirds  of  Susan,  his  wife,      """'^  ^^■,, 

''  '  J  ^  J  ?   power  to  sell 

during  hir  life,  if  challendged,  excepted.  M'  Sellecks 

howse. 

Gent" : 
Wee  suppose  you  are  not  ignorant  of  y*  clajme  made  by  our  comissloners  Letter  to  M' 
att  Wells,  anno  Doni  1653,  to  the  government  of  those  parts,  &  theire  protes-  J(,^J.dan. 
tacbn,  then  published  by  the  marshall,  against  any  that  should  challenge 
or  excercise  authoritje  ouer  any  persons  Inhabiting  w"'ln  the  Ijmltts  of  our 
pattent  beyond  Saco  but  what  shall  be  derived  from  this  Generall  Court, 
■which,  though  they  were  not  then  exactly  knowne,  yett  in  the  yeare  ffol- 
lowing  were  bounded  by  artists  employed  by  vs,  and  are  yet  vnknoune  to 
yourselves,  since  which  wee  haue  implojed  coiiiissloners  to  setle  those  parts, 
and  to  finish  what  was  not  donne  by  our  former  comissloners  at  Wells ;  but 
that  buiseness  proceeded  not  according  to  our  expectation,  although  yo'selves 
were  desired  to  meete  oiu-  comissloners  at  Yorke.  Wee  haue  heard  diverse 
complaints  for  want  of  government,  and  haue  binn  informed  of  some  endeavo" 
to  disturbe  thie  qulett  of  y'*  people  at  Saco  and  Wells,  which  wee  haue  winked 
at,  expecting  a  ready  complyance  of  all  persons  inhabiting  our  llmitts,  espe- 
cially since  our  answer  to  y"  expostulacons  and  demaunds  made  to  us  by  the 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  39 


306  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


15  May. 


1657.  inhabitants  there,  presented  to  vs  by  M''  Cleve  ;  but  finding  ourselves  deceived 
"^1  '  in  our  expectation,  wee  haue  againe  given  coiiiisslon  to  some  gentlemen,  whom 
wee  desire  and  expect  yow  will  mecte  at  the  next  County  Court  at  Yorke,  and 
contribute  yo''  asistance  for  the  selling  of  those  parts  beyond  Saco  to  the  vt- 
most  bounds  of  om-  pattent ;  and  yo''  concurrance  heerein  will,  wee  doubt  not, 
much  conduce  to  the  good  of  those  parts,  which  is  a  principle  scope  and  de- 
sii'e  of  the  GeQ^  Court  of  the  Massachusetts. 

Yorkshire  pe-  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  the  peticbn  presented  from  the  inhabitants  of  York- 

his  highnes.      shire  be  sent  to  his  highnes  the  Lord  Protector,  according  to  theire  desire. 
M'  Coilings  &  The  Court,  observing  that  two  gent"  retoiu-ned  for  deputjes  to  serve  at 

this  Court,  after  chojce  &  acceptance,  viz.,  M''  Edward  Collins  for  Cambrldg, 
&  M'  Valentine  Hill,  of  Douer,  whereby  they  haue  broken  the  lawe  made  in 
y*  yeare  1654,  requiring  theire  attendance  vnder  the  pocnalty  of  twenty  shil- 
lings p  day,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  gent"  should  haue  notice  to  give  a  reason 
of  theire  absence  at  the  next  session  of  this  Court,  or  else  the  lawe  provided 
in  that  case  to  be  in  force  against  them. 
Days  graunts  Steven  Day,  of  Cambridg,  having  often  complajned  that  he  hath  suffered 

acres.  '  much  damage  by  errecting  the  printing  presse  at  Cambridge,  at  the  request  of 

the  magistrates  &  elders,  for  w*  he  neuer  had  yett  any  considerable  sattisfac- 
tion,  this  Court  doe  graunt  him  three  hundred  acres  of  land  in  any  place  not 
formerly  graunted  by  this  Court. 
Marshall  Mich-  Marshall  Generall  Edward  Michelson  having  binn  many  wayes  servica- 

"^/soo  ^^'^"^  ^^®  ^°  ^^^^  country,  as  in  wayting  on  the  comissioners  to  Kettery,  &  otherwise, 
besides  his  constant  imployment,  for  which  he  hath  had  no  allowance  from  the 
publicke  tresury,  this  Courte  doe  therefore  graunt  him  three  hundred  acres  of 
land  in  any  place  not  formerly  disposed  of  by  this  Court. 

In  obedience  to  an  order  of  the  County  Court,  held  at  Charles  Toune, 
Decern^  SO"",  1656,  wee,  whose  names  are  vnderwritten,  meeting  at  Cam- 
bridg, 2'*  1  i?i,  l^,  to  weigh  and  consider  what  briges  are  fittest  to  be  built  & 
mainteyned  at  the  countjes  charge,  after  due  examination  of  things,  wee  finde 
the  bridges  of  this  county  already  erected  &  to  be  erected  (as  wee  conceive)  to 
exceede  for  noumber  &  charge  all  the  other  countjes  w*Mn  this  colony,  and 
[*259.]  w"'all  considering  the  *greate  necessitje  of  bringing  in  all  that  are  alike  vsefull, 
Vf'^^  would  amount  to  such  a  charge  that  wee  qujestion  the  countjes  abilitje  to 
mainteinc  &  beare  the  charge  thereof,  and  having  some  experimentall  knowl- 
edge that  tounes  will  be  more  cautious  in  laying  out  theire  oune  costs  then 
the  countjes,  both  in  building  &  repayring,  doe  therefore  conclude,  according 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  397 

to  our  weake  aphentions,  that  as  few  bridges  should  be  built  at  the  conntjes 
charge  as  possibly  maybe,  only  those  two  bridges,  i.  e.,  at  Billirrikey  &  Mis- 
ticko,  to  be  finished  at  the  countys  charge,  and  for  tjme  to  come  majnteined 
in  repajre  by  the  tonnes  &  precincts  in  which  they  arc,  and  those  touncs  that 
are  forced  to  build  bridges  more  for  the  passage  of  others  then  theire  oune 
benefitt,  may  haue  help  from  the  county,  by  this  honnored  Courts  appoint- 
ment, if  theire  burden  in  building  bridges  exceede  theire  sister  tonnes,  and  in  Order  setling 
case  any  toune  shall  propound  to  this  honnored  Court  for  erecting  of  bridges  county  of  ^ 
contrary  to  what  is  heere  present,  wee  are  ready  to  giue  further  account  to  M""'^'*'^'''  *^ 
this  Court  why  the  county  should  be  no  further  charged  that  way.  And 
whereas  it  appcares  to  vs  that  Concord,  Sudbury,  &  Lancaster  are  at  a  greater 
charge  in  bridges  for  the  publicque  vse  of  the  conntrje  then  some  other  of 
theire  neighbor  tounes,  wee  conceive  it  meete  that  they  be  abated  as  follow- 
eth :  Concord  &  Lancaster  all  theire  rates,  whither  pajd  or  to  be  pajd,  to  those 
two  bridges  aboue  named,  &  Sudbury  the  one  halfe  of  theire  rates  to  the  sajd 
bridges,  and  theire  abatements  to  be  sattisfied  to  the  vndertakers  of  those 
bridges,  or  repajed  againe  to  such  as  haue  pajd,  as  followeth:  i.  e.,  Chelms- 
ford, two  pounds ;  Billirrikey,  one  pound ;  Charles  Toune,  tenn  pounds  ; 
Meadford,  two  pounds  ;  &  what  these  shall  fall  short  of  sattisfying  those 
aboue  mencbned  abatements,  made  vp  out  of  the  connty  stocke,  either  fines  or 
otherwise,  as  the  Court  shall  please  to  determine. 

Provided  alwajes  wee  tliinke  it  meete  that  no  stop  be  made  of  any  the 
aboueid  abatement,  so  as  to  interfere  or  obstruct  the  performing  of  the 
present  engagement  respecting  those  bridges. 

RALFE   MOUSALL, 
HUGH   MASON, 
EDWARD   GOFFE, 
JOSEPH    WHEELER, 
THO:    NOJES, 
EDWARD   JOHNSON, 
WILL:    COUDREY, 
ABRAHAM   HILL, 
JN°   PRESCOTT, 
JOHN   PARKER. 

7:  S2  A,  1657. 
This  retourne  being  made  to  y*  Court,  it  was  accepted  by  y"  Court,  who 
ordere  that  this  retourne  of  y"  comittee  shall  be  presented  to  the  next  Gefii" 
Court  by  the  dark  of  y°  Court  for  theire  coufirmacon  &  setling  thereof. 

THOS:   DANFORTH,  Recorder. 


308 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Artilliry, 

graunt  of  500 
acres  lajd  out. 


14  October, 
1657. 


This  retourne,  aboue  menconed,  so  signed,  was  accordingly  presented  to 
the  Generall  Court  the  18  3  in,  1657,  who  did  allow,  approove,  and  confirme 
the  coiiiittees  determinations  in  reference  to  y"  matters  conteyned  in  the  re- 
tourne, according  to  y"  County  Courts  desire,  any  lawe,  vsage,  or  custome  to 
y"  contrary  notw^'standing. 

In  answer  to  y'  peticon  of  y^  Artilliry  Company  at  Boston,  five  hundred 
acres,  pt  of  the  thousand  acres  formerly  graunted  them,  &  layd  out  by  Ju° 
Sherman,  neere  vnto  Concord  Ijne,  where  it  comes  ouer  Shawshin  Riuer,  being 
fower  hundred  rods  in  length  &  two  hundred  rods  in  breadth,  the  Ijnes  run- 
ning neere  south  west  &  by  west,  &  north  east  &  by  east,  &  north  west  &  by 
north,  &  south  east  &  by  south,  is  allowed  &  confirmed  to  them  ;  and  it  is 
further  ordered,  that  the  other  five  hundred  acres  be  lajd  out  next  y^  five  hun- 
dred acres  already  layd  out,  at  the  head  lyne,  betweene  Concord  &  Cambridge, 
if  free  from  other  graunts,  els  on  y"  southwest  of  Meadefeild. 

The  Court  is  adjourned  to  y"  14"*  day  of  October  next,  at  eight  of  y" 
clocke  in  y'  mof ing. 


[*260.] 

14  October. 


Addition  to  y" 
late  lawe  ag* 
entertayiiing 
Quakers,  &c. 


*^tt  a  Gennerall  Court,  held  at  Boston,  14  of  October,  165T. 

MiE  Court  mett  againe  at  the  tjme  appointed. 

As  an  addition  to  y'^  late  order  in  reference  to  the  coming  or  bringing  in 
any  of  the  cursed  sect  of  the  Quakers  into  this  jurisdiction,  it  is  ordered,  that 
whosoeuer  shall  from  henceforth  bring,  or  cawse  to  be  brought,  directly  or  indi- 
rectly, any  knoune  Quaker  or  Quakers,  or  other  blasphemous  haereticks,  into 
this  jurisdiccon,  euery  such  person  shall  forfeite  the  soiiie  of  one  hundred 
pounds  to  y"  countrje,  and  shall  by  warrant  from  any  magistrate  be  coiiiitted 
to  prison,  there  to  remajne  till  the  pcenalty  be  sattis:Qed  and  pajd ;  and  if  any 
person  or  persons  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon  shall  henceforth  entertajne  and  con- 
ceale  any  such  Quaker  or  Quakers,  or  other  blasphemous  haereticks,  (knowing 
them  so  to  be,)  euery  such  person  shall  forfeite  to  the  countrye  forty  shil- 
lings for  euery  howers  entertajnment  and  concealement  of  any  Quaker  or 
Quakers,  as  aforesajd,  and  shall  be  coiiiitted  to  prison,  as  aforesajd,  till 
the  forfeitures  be  fully  sattisfied  and  pajd.  And  it  is  farther  ordered, 
that  if  any  Quaker  or  Quakers  shall  presume,  after  they  haue  once  suf- 
fered what  the  lawe  requireth,  to  come  into  this  jurisdiccon,  euery  such 
male  Quaker  shall  for  the  first  ofienc  haue  one  of  his  eares  cutt  ofi",  and 
be  kept  at  worke  in  the  howse  of  correction  till  he  canu  be  sent  away  at  his 
oune  charge,  and  for  the  second  ofienc  shall  haue  his  other  eare  cutt  of,  &6, 


11  Ottober. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY   IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  309 

and  kept  at  the  house  of  correction,  as  aforesaid ;  and  euei-y  ■woman  Quaker  1057. 
that  hath  suffered  the  lawe  hecre  that  shall  presume  to  come  into  this  juris- 
diccon  sliall  be  severely  -whipt,  and  kept  at  the  howse  of  correction  at 
worke  till  she  be  sent  away  at  hir  oune  charge,  and  so  also  for  hir  coming 
againe  she  shallbe  alike  vsed  as  aforesajd  ;  and  for  euery  Quaker,  he  or 
she,  that  shall  a  third  tjme  heerein  againe  offend,  they  shall  haue  theire 
toungues  bored  through  -w""  a  hot  iron,  &  kept  at  the  house  of  correction, 
close  to  worke,  till  they  be  sent  away  at  theire  oune  charge.  And  it  is  further 
ordered,  that  all  &  euery  Quaker  arising  from  amongst  ourselves  shall  be 
dealt  w"*  &  suffer  the  like  punishment  as  the  lawe  provides  against  forreigne 
Quakers. 

It  is  ordered  by  this  Court  &  the  authority  thereof,  that  henceforth  euery  ConnstaUes  to 
counstable  is  impowred  &  hereby  enjoyned  faithfully  to  collect  such  rates  and 
assessments  as  shall  from  tjme  to  tjme  be  coiliitted  vnto  them  respectively  by 
y*  select  men  of  the  seuerall  tounes,  provided  it  be  by  warrant  vnder  theire 
hands. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  all  sorts  of  corne,  payable  into  the  countrje  rate  for  Prise  of  corno 
this  yeare,  shall  be  pajd  the  one  halfe  in  wheate,  barly,  or  barly  mault,  at  ratcs"&c.''° 
fower  shillings  p  bushell,  not  above  one  quarter  in  Indian,  at  two  shillings 
sixe  pence  p  bushell,  in  rye  &  pease  at  three  shillings  p  bushell,  and  all  other 
goods  shallbe  valued  at  the  price  of  corne.  And  it  is  further  ordered,  that 
the  current  price  of  all  sorts  of  corne  shall  be  in  all  payments  as  it  is  stated 
in  the  countiy  rate  for  this  yeare,  except  it  be  otherwise  concluded  by  mutuall 
consent  of  partjes  as  are  concerned  therein. 

In  the  case  of  Leiuten"'  Phillips,  he  being  bound  to  ans'  to  this  Court  Lef  Phillips 
for  his  son,  who  was  accused  for  bringing  in  Quakers  into  this  jurisdiccon,     '"'^'^'^se  ,t  t. 
the  Court,  on  a  hearing  of  the  case,  doth   acquitt  &  dischaige  y"  5d   Left 
Phillips  of  his  bond,  no  good  evvidence  appearing  to  proove  y''  accusacon. 

*Whereas  in  y'  origiuall   bill  for  y"  desiring   the   honnored  Gove"""  to      [*261.] 
remoove  vS:  make  his  aboade  in  Boston,  it  was  propounded  by  the  Magis'*,  &  Governcs 

-nv  ■  ■  1  •  1  1  1,  house  rent  to 

consented  to  by  y"  JDeputjes,  to  consider  either  then,  w"^"  was  in  May,  1655,  or  be  discharged, 
the  next  sessions  in  the  same  yeare,  suiteable  accomodacons  that  may  encom-age 
for  the  future,  w"^  being  forgotten  or  neglected  at  the  tjmes,  the  Governo"' 
having  attended  the  Courts  mocon,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  that  his  howse  rent 
for  this  two  yeares  past  shall  be  pajd  &  discharged  by  the  Tresurer. 

Whereas,  att  a  meeting  of  the  council!  of  the  coiiionwealth,  August  14"", 
1656,  they  tooke  into  consideracon  the  sad  contcncon  &  divicon  of  the 
church'  of  Salisbury  &  Hauerill,  &  therevpon  thought  it  necessary  to  send 
certajne  elders  &  other  messengers  to  compose  that  difference,  whicli,  through 


310 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1657.  the  blessing  of  God  vpon  theire  endeavo''^  is  in  a  good  measure  attayned,  & 

'^       ^  theire  officers   setled  amongst  them,  which  greatly  concernes  the  welfare  of 

Charges  ex-  those  touues,  and  whereas  the  sajd  conncill  appointed  M'  Sam  Hall  &  M' 

pcnded  at  Jqo  Cleoments  to  entertajne  the  sajd  messengers,  and  to  receave  payment  for 

Salisbury  & 

HaueriU  to  be  the  present  from  the  Tresnrer  of  y'^  countrje,  intending  at  the  least  to  lay  the 
counstable  charges  in  conclusion  vpon  the  delinquents  that  were  the  occasion  of  that 
there  byarate,  (;i-Q^j]3ig^  ^j^jj  forasmuch  as  the  sajd  messengers  haue  made  only  a  verball 
retoume  In  the  generall  what  successe  God  hath  given  to  that  affiiire,  nor  doe 
wee  finde  them  free  to  nominate  persons  that  maybe  sent  for  &  further 
proceeded  with,  &  considering  the  whole  tounes  hath  receaved  reall  benefit 
more  wajes  then  one  by  the  result  of  that  meeting,  &  the  following  successe, 
haue  therefore  thought  meetc  to  recede  from  that  w'^''  was  first  intended,  & 
from  that  which  in  after  tjmes  this  Court  intends  to  practise  towards  delin- 
quents in  like  cases,  &  that  shallbe  found  so  by  this  or  any  other  Court  of 
judicature,  doe  therefore  order  &  aj)pointe  the  counstables  of  the  sajd  tounes 
forthwith  to  call  the  toune  together,  &  levy,  by  way  of  rate,  the  soine  of 
twelve  pounds  nineteene  shillings,  according  to  the  way  &  rule  of  the  countrje 
rate  vpon  euery  inhabitant  for  his  estate,  only  leaving  out  head  money,  & 
deliuer  the  same  to  INI'^  Hall,  or  his  assignes,  in  sattisfaction  of  the  aforesajd 
chardges  at  Salisbury :  the  like  coui'se  the  counstable  of  HaueriU  is  to  take 
for  y"  sattisfying  of  M"^  Cleoments  for  y^  chardges  expended  in  HaueriU,  &d. 

At  a  County  Court,  held  at  Salem,  1  5  in,  57. 

Whereas  there  were  seuerall  accons  coiiienced  at  this  Court  by  some  of 
Ipswich  case  the  inhabitants  of  Ipswich,  which  were  of  great  &  generall  concernment,  and 
affirmative"  *^^  Coiurt,  fearing  the  vsiiall  manner  of  proceeding  would  not  put  a  comfort- 
able issue  to  y'=  sajd  cases,  propounded  to  the  partjes  that  the  quajstion  in 
controuersie  might  be  stated  &  presented  to  the  Generall  Court  for  resolution, 
w'^'*  determine  the  particcular  accons,  and  all  others  that  arise  vpon  the  sajd 
quaestion,  w'^  qua3stion  was  by  the  Court  stated,  w*  the  consent  of  partjes,  & 
is  also  as  followeth  :  — 

Att  a  generall  yearely  meeting  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  toune  of 
Ipswich,  25  Fet),  1655,  voted  to  give  one  hundred  pounds  towards  building 
or  buying  a  howse  for  M"'  Cobbett.  The  question  is,  whither  this  A'ote  doth 
binde  all  or  any  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  sajd  toune  to  pay  any  thing  towards 
the  sajd  hundred  pounds,  &  that  such  as  are  or  were  vnwilling  maybe  com- 
pelled therevnto,  yea  or  no;  and  it  is  agreed,  that  either  partje  shall  haue 
libertje  to  present  theire  reasons  in  writing  to  the  Generall  Court,  pro  &  con, 
but  no  other  pleading  by  either  parte  to  be  allowed. 

Vera  copia.  P  ELIAS   STILEMAN,   Clerc. 


14  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  31I 

This  case,  thus  signed  by  the  officer  of  the  Couuty  Court  at  Salem,  was       1  fi  5  7. 
presented  to  the  Generall  Court  sitting  at  Boston  14*  of  October,  57,  who, 
after  pvsall  of  the  reasons  alleadged  by  both  partjes,  and  consideracon  of  the 
question,  the  Court  resolved  it  on  the  affirmative. 

*In  the  case  betweene  M'^  John  Johnson,  of  Roxbury,  attourncy  for  M"^      [*262.] 
AV™  Sheldon,  of  London,  plaintiffe,  &  Leifl  Joshua  Hues,  of  Boston,  admin-  Sheidcnscase 

determined. 

istrato''  to  the  estate  of  M'"  Joshua  Foote,  defend"',  in  referenc  to  two  hundred 
pounds  w*  he,  the  sajd  M''  Joshua  Foote,  promised  to  giue  as  a  marriage  por- 
con  w"*  his  daughter  vnto  the  sajd  Sheldon,  the  Court,  on  a  hearing  of  the  case 
<&  all  partjes  concerned  therein,  finds  for  the  plaintiffe  two  hundred  pounds 
damage,  &  thirty  nine  shillings  &  eight  pence  costs. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  Michelson,  the  Court  judgeth  it  Edward  Mich- 

.  .,^  ,       .  f^  ,.  .  Olsons  recom- 

nicete  to  graunt  the  peticoner  the  impost  of  strong  waters,  accordmg  as  it  was  jjcnce,  &-c. 
formerly  graunted,  only  for  two  yeares  now  next  coming,  and  for  his  attend- 
anc  on  the  honnored  coiiiissioners  of  the  colonjes  the  soiiie  of  three  pounds. 

Vpon  occasion  &  in  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Concord,  Lancaster,  »S:c^,  Ans'  to  Con- 
the  Court,  taking  into  consideracon  the  great  necessitje  of  a  constant  supply  ^rr,  peticon 
of  iron  to  carry  on  the  occasions  of  the  countrie,  and  being  credibly  informed  "''"^' "'''" 

wovkes,  &c. 

that  the  workes  in  present  being  are  not  like  long  to  continew,  nor  doe  those 
gent"  in  England  (to  whom  this  Court  graunted  certajne  j^riveledges  &  immu- 
nitjes)  psecute  the  same,  as  was  expected  &  intended,  nor  take  care  how  the 
eountrje  for  the  present  &  future  tjmes  maybe  provided  for,  whereby  vnsufferable 
damage  may  accrew,  if  not  tjmely  prevented  by  the  care  of  this  Court  &  indus- 
trje  of  the  people ;  and  forasmuch  ^  the  present  owno''s  of  the  sajd  works 
haue  not  binn  able  at  all  tjmes  to  supply  the  inhabitants  w""  iron,  becawse 
they  had  it  not,  and  many  tjmes  haue  exceeded  the  price  Ijmittcd  in  the  agree- 
ment w""  the  first  vndertakers,  Sc  being  demanded  by  this  Court  whither 
they  held  themselves  engaged  to  make  good  the  vndertakers  couenant  as  to 
the  supplying  the  eountrje  with  iron,  refused  to  make  answer  therevnto,  the 
premisses  considered,  the  Court  judgeth  it  necessary  to  provide  for  theire  oune 
indempnitje,  and  therefore  doe  graunt  to  the  inhabitants  of  Concord  &  Lancas- 
ter, and  such  as  they  shall  associate  vnto  them,  according  to  the  tenor  of  theire 
peticon,  liberty  to  erect  one  or  more  iron  workes  w'Hn  the  Ijmitts  of  theiie 
oune  toune  bounds,  or  in  any  comon  place  neere  therevnto,  any  law,  order,  or 
graunt  to  the  contrary  notwithstanding ;  provided,  neuertheless,  the  aforesajd 
gent"  in  England,  or  theire  assignes,  shall  haue  libertje  for  one  yeare  from  the 
first  of  March  next  to  purchase  the  sajd  worke  or  M'orkes,  vpon  due  valuation 
&  consideracon,  as  this  Court,  or  persons  indifferently  chosen,  shall  judge 
aequall ;  provided  also,  that  it  shall  not  be  lawfuU  for  the  owno''s  of  this  new 


14  October. 


812  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1657.  worke  intended  by  themselves  or  agents,  directly  or  indirectly,  to  hire  or  en- 
tertajne  any  of  the  workemen  at  psent  implojed  in  or  about  the  workes  at 
Haincrsmitli  or  Braintrje  that  are  by  couenant  engaged  to  the  ouno''s  thereof, 
or  that  are  indebted  to  them,  &  by  promise  bound  to  worke  out  the  same, 
except  they  shall  obtajne  the  free  consent  of  the  sajd  owners  or  agents  so  to 
doe,  that  so  the  setting  v^j  of  one  worke  may  not  pjudice  the  old. 

Ans'  to  fisher-  In  answer  to  y"  peticon  of  Edw  Kainsford,  Gamaljel  Wajte,  John  Shawe, 

Mathew  Abdy,  Richard  George,  John  Pell,  Richard  HoUige,  Rich  Wood- 
howse,  Robt  Linkhorne,  Abell  Porter,  Peter  Till,  Abraham  Broune,  Jn"  Mel- 
lows, fishermen,  humbly  desiring  that  they  may  be  exempted  from  traynings 
during  the  tjme  of  the  fishing  season,  &d,  the  Court  graunts  theire  request. 
[*263.]  *Whereas  this  Court  hath  formerly  declared  theire  right  of  jurisdiccon 

ouer  the  inhabitants  of  Blacke  Pointe,  Blew  Point,  &  Casco  Bay,  to  the  latti- 
tude  of  forty  three  degrees  forty  three  north^'ly  lattitude,  and  haue  hitherto 
made  very  amicable  applications  to  the  inhabitants  there,  and  this  last  somer 
did  send  coiuission"^*  to  Yorke,  expecting  the  principall  persons  dwelling  in 
those  parts  would,  vpon  our  letters  formerly  to  them  directed,  haue  attended 
our  coinissioners  for  the  issuing  of  the  buisnes,  but  the  sajd  partjes  fayling, 
the  sajd  coinissioners  did,  by  warrant  vnder  theire  hands,  (whereof  the  partjes 
had  notice,)  suiiion  the  inhabitants  of  the  parts  aforesajd  to  appeare  at  the 
Generall  Court  at  Boston,  October  li"",  1657,  where  and  when  the  partjes 
aforesajd,  being  called,  appeared  not,  but  made  default,  and  iusteede  thereof,  at 
the  latter  end  of  the  Court,  a  paper,  subscribed  by  George  Cleve,  was  present- 
ed to  this  Court,  (wherein  he  declares  against  the  legalitje  of  our  proceedings, 
&  the  resolution  of  the  inhabitants  there,  as  he  g'tendeth,)  to  deny  submission 
vnto  vs,  wee  doe  heereby  declare  our  right  &  clajme  to  those  parts,  &  the  in- 
jurious refusall  of  the  inhabitants  there,  concerning  which  wee  shall  seriously 
advise  what  for  the  future  maybe  most  expedjent  for  vs,  yet  for  the  present 
judge  it  best  to  surcease  any  further  prosecution,  w"*  this  protestation,  that  if 

Courts  declara-  any  mischiefe  or  inconvenienc  happen,  by  reason  of  theire  oune  differences, 

tion  &  protes-  r  j-  i     ^  •  i        ■ 

tation  in  refe'e  or  for  want  of  a  setled  government  there,  that  Avee  are  innocent,  (having  vsed. 


to  y"  eastern 
p». 

October  23,  57.  must  &  ought  to  be  imputed  to  the  sajd  inhabitants. 


„  in  our  vnderstanding,  all  requisite  endeavors,)  and  that  all  the  blame  &  dainger 


M'  Dunsters  In  the  case  betweene  M'  Dunster  &  y*  countrje,  wee,  the  coiiiittee  of  the 

recompence.      Qenerall  Court,  having  duly  examined  &  seriously  weighed  the  allegations  of 

M''  Edward  Rawson  on  the  countrjes  behalfe,  as  well  as  the  dilligent  service 

of  M'  Dunster  for  soundry  yeares  as  pisident  of  the  colledgc,  doe  humbly 

'  conceaue  his  recomijenc  then  rcce'vd  was  short  of  his  labor,  being  much  more 


23  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 

then  is  allowed  in  that  service  at  present,  &  therefore  wee  doe  judge  it  for  the 
honnor  of  the  countrje  to  give  him  the  additional!  reward  of  one  hundred 
pounds,  or  at  least  to  acquitt  him  of  any  debts  due  to  the  coimirje ;  &  all  this 
with  submission  to  y"  honnored  Court. 

DANIELL   GOOKIN, 
SYMON  WILLARD. 

The  Court  considering  that  M'  Dunster,  in  the  tjme  when  he  was  presi- 
dent, was  very  serviceable  to  his  vtmost  to  advance  the  good  of  the  colledge," 
for  w"^*"  no  full  recompence  hath  binn  allowed,  judge  meete  to  acquitt  &  dis- 
charge him  of  that  debt  he  owes  to  the  countrje,  which  is  not  aboue  forty  or 
fiuety  pounds,  as  a  gratuity  for  his  good  service. 

In  the  case  of   Edward  Rawson,  attourney  for  the  Massachusetts  ju-  Courts  judg- 
risdiccbn,    plaintiffe,    against    Richard   Woodde,    defendant,    the    Court,    on  S^"j!^ 
hearing  of  all  evidences  in  y"  case  y'  was  produced  by  both  partjes  at  the 
Coimty  Court  and  Courte  of  Asistants,  doe  finde  for  the  plaintiffe  seventeene 
pounds  nine  shillings  &  six  pence,  &  thirty  shillings  costs,  &  ordered  the 
sajd  seventeen  pounds  to  be  pd  in  peage,  at  6  a  penny,  as  he  receaved  it. 

M'  Jeremiah  Houchin,  Capt  Tho  Savage,  Capt  Tho  Clarke,  M'  Anthony  Coisissioners 
Stoddard,  M"'  Nath  Duncan,  JNP  Edward  Tyng,  &  M''  Richard  Parker,  chosen  g^o^jg  before 
&  retourned  coiulssioners  for  y"  toune  of  Boston  for  y''  yeare  ensuing,  tooke  y°  Court. 
theii'e  oathes  before  the  whole  Court. 

•Whither  execution  issuing  out  of  the  Court  of  Boston  coinissioners,  by      [*264.] 
virtue   of  a  judgRient  there  obtajned,  may  be   executed  in  any  part  of  this  Question,  how 

farr  executions 

jurisdiccon,  the  Court  resolved  it  on  the  negative,  declaring  y'  execution  cann  may  be  served, 
goe  no  further  then  attachment,  and  that  all  persons  sued  to  the  Comissioners  cogussio" 
Court  are  bound  to  giue  in  suretje  by  some  knowne  able  inhabitant  of  Boston  Court, 
to  respond  the  judgement  &  satisfye  execution. 

There  being  in  the  yeare   1656  fiffty  acres   of  land  graunted  to  John  EdmodRice 
Stone,  of  Sudbury,  M''  Nojce  &  Edmond  Rice  being  appointed  to  lay  out  the  ^^  lay^out'so^ 
sajd  land,  M'^  Nojce  being  deade,  Ensigne  Noyce  is  appointed  to  supply  his  acres  of  land 

for  Jn"  Stone. 

fathers  roome,  to  joyne  w"^  Edmond  Rice  to  lay  out  the  sajd  land. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticbn  of  Robert  Pike,  humbly  desiring  y"  Courts  favo"",  Rob«  Pikes 
his  fine  being  pajd,  to  remitt  to  him  &  release  him  from  the  other  pte  of  the 
Courts  former  sentence  against  him,  M''  Worcester,  y"  pastor  of  y"  church  at 
Salisbury  appearing  on  y®  behalfe  of  the  peticoner,  and  acknowledging  him- 
self much  bound  to  the  Court  if  they  would  be  pleased  to  graunt  y'=  sajd 
Pikes  request,  the  Court  graunts  his  request. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Steeven  Gates,  humbly  desiring  y'  no  fine 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  40 


314 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1667. 

23  October. 
Ans'  to  Gates 
petlcon. 
Ans'  to  Mars- 
tons  peticon, 
he  fined  10". 


Caps  lef ,  & 
ensigne  of 
Springfeild 
compay. 


Ans'  to  major 
gen'^  peticon. 


Cap*  Gookins 
600  acres  at 
Pequod. 


[*265.] 

Roxbury  land 
of  4000  acres  to 
be  lajd  out. 


Ans'  to  Jn*" 
Shaws  peticon. 


Ans'  to  Cap' 

Davenports 

peticon. 

Provicon  for 
setUng  of  min- 
isters &  minis- 
ters niajnte- 
nance. 


may  be  inflicted  on  him  for  his  neglect  in  not  warning  the  freemen  to  give  in 
theire  votes  for  magis*"*,  he  being  at  y"  tjme  sicke,  &  having  pd  tenn  shiUings 
for  entering  his  peticSn,  the  Coiut  graunts  his  request. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Willjam  Marston,  humbly  desiring  the 
remittment  of  his  fine,  imposed  on  him  by  y"  County  Court  at  Hampton,  for 
keeping  two  Quakers  bookes  &  a  paper  of  the  Quakers,  according  to  law,  i.  e., 
fiveteene  pounds,  leaving  himself  to  y'  Courts  mercy,  acknowledging  he  hath 
transgrest  y"  law  of  y"  countrje,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  remitt  one 
third  pt  of  his  fine,  the  other  two  thirds  being  levjed  &  pajd  in  forthwith. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Henry  Burt,  clarke  to  y"  company  at  Spring- 
feild, humbly  desiring  that  theire  chojce  of  M'^  John  Pinchon,  captaine,  M' 
Elizur  Holiocke,  leftenant,  &  Thomas  Cooper,  ensigne,  may  be  allowed  and 
approoved  of,  &  confirmed  in  theire  places  by  this  Court,  the  Court  graunts 
theire  requests,  &  allows  of  &  confirms  y"  gen'°  aboue  sajd  in  those  places. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Majo''  Gen"  Daniel  Dennison,  desiring  that  y" 
five  hiindred  acres  of  land  graunted  to  him  by  this  Comt  to  be  lajd  out  on 
Conecticott  Riuer  in  two  places,  may  be  graunted  him  to  be  lajd  out  to  him 
either  at  Pennaquooke,  on  either  side  of  ]Merremake  Riuer,  or  neere  Pacom- 
sickqucke,  about  3  or  4  miles  beyond  IMcrremack  Riuer,  about  sixe  or  eight 
miles  below  Patucket,  as  he  shall  find  most  convenient  foi-  him  to  choose,  the 
Court  graunts  his  request,  provided  it  hinder  no  former  graunts. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  five  hundred  acres  of  land  graunted  the  last  session 
of  this  Courte  to  Captaine  Daniell  Gookin  be  lajd  out  in  some  convenient 
place  on  the  eastermost  side  of  Pequot  Riuer  by  Cap?  George  Dennison,  who 
is  appointed  to  see  the  same  donne  accordingly. 

*There  being  heretofore  fower  thousand  acres  of  land  graunted  to  Rox- 
biuy  by  this  Court,  a  pt  of  which  remajnes  yett  vnlajd  out,  this  Court  doth 
therefore  heereby  order  &  appointe,  that  Capt  Eliazer  Lusher  &  Leiu?  Joshua 
Fisher,  of  Dedham,  to  lay  out  the  sajd  land  according  to  the  graunt,  and, 
hauing  finished  the  same,  to  make  retourne  thereof  at  the  next  Coiut  of 
Election.      This  to  be  donne  at  the  charge  of  the  grauntees. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  John  Shawe,  the  Court  declares,  that  if  any 
man  deprives  him  of  his  right  in  any  lands,  the  lawe  is  open  for  him  to  trye 
his  title  in  y^  County  Court. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Capt  Richard  Davenport,  the  Courte  judgeth  it 
meete  to  graunt  him  five  hundred  acres  of  land. 

Whereas  it  appeares  by  the  retournes  of  the  seiierall  coiiiittees  of  the 
respective  countjes  that  some  ministers  are  not  so  well  provided  for  as  they 
ought  to  be,  &  some  places  wholy  destitute  of  ministers,  this  Court,  taking 
the  same  into  consideracon,  doe  therefore  order,  that  the  sajd  retoiu'nes   be 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  315 

transmitted  to  the  Courts  of  that  county  to  W**  they  belong,  which  Courts  ai-e      16  5  7. 
heereby  fully  authorized,  &  also  desired,  to  take  the  best  &  speediest  opper-    '       '^    T* 

•  1    •  1  •  1  •  1         •  1        ,■       ■    •  23  October. 

tunitje  &  meanes  to  relciue  the  sajd  wants,  either  in  supply  of  ministers  where 
there  is  none,  and  meanes  to  majntajne  and  supply  the  minister  where  they 
are  in  the  seuciall  countjes,  as  to  the  sajd  Courts  shall  seeme  most  expedjent, 
&  iu  case  no  way  or  meanes  shall  appeare  for  the  attajnement  hereof,  that  then 
they  shall  signify  the  same  from  tjme  to  time  to  y"  Generall  Court  to  be 
further  considered  of. 

In  answer  to  ceitaine  proposalls  presented  to  this  Court  by  the  ouerseers  An  appendixe 
of  Harvard  CoUedge,  as  an  appendix  to  the  colledge  charter,  it  is  ordered,  the  (.hMter 
corporation  shall  haue  power  from  tjme  to  tjme  to  make  such  orders  &  by 
lawes  for  the  better  ordering  &  carrying  on  of  the  worke  of  the  colledge,  as 
they  shall  see  cawse,  w*out  dependance  vpoii  the  consent  of  y'  ouerseers  fore- 
going ;  provided,  alwajes,  that  the  corporation  shall  be  responsable  vnto,  & 
those  orders  &  by  lawes  shallbe  alterable  by,  the  ouerseers  according  to  theire 
discretion.  And  when  the  corporation  shall  hold  a  meeting,  &  agreeing  w"» 
colledge  servants,  for  making  of  orders  &  by  lawes,  for  debating  &  concluding 
of  affaires  concerning  the  proffitts  &  revenues  of  any  lands  or  guiftes,  &  the 
disposing  thereof,  (provided  that  all  the  sajd  disposalls  be  according  to  y«  will 
of  the  dono",j  for  mannaging  of  all  emergent  occasions  for  the  procuring  of  a 
generall  meeting  of  the  ouerseers  &  society  in  great  and  difficult  cases,  &  in 
cases  of  non  agreement,  &  for  all  other  colledge  affaires  to  them  ptajning,  in 
all  these  cases  the  conclusion  shall  be  valjd,  being  made  by  the  majo'  part  of 
the  corporacSn,  the  president  having  a  casting  vote  j  provided  alwajes,  that  in 
these  things  also  they  be  responsable  to  the  ouerseers  as  aforesajd.  And 
in  case  the  corporacon  shall  see  cawse  to  call  a  meeting  of  the  ouerseers,  or  the 
ouerseers  shall  thinke  goode  to  meete  of  themselves,  it  shall  be  sufficijent  vnto 
the  validditje  of  colledge  acts  that  notice  be  given  to  the  ouerseers  in^tlie  sixe 
tounes  menconed  in  the  printed  lawe,  anno  1642,  when  the  rest  of  the  ouer- 
seers, by  reason  of  the  remotenes  of  theire  habbitacons,  cannot  conveniently 
be  acquainted  therewith. 

*In  ans"'  to  the  peticSn  of  Georg  Dcnnison,  W"  Thompson,  "Walter  Palmer,      [*266.] 
Tho  Stainton,  &  Jn°  Gallop,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  order,  that  the  letter  ^^^'  *"  ^^P*- 

Deunisons 

herevnder  writt  be  sent  to  the  Generall  Court  of  Conecticott  by  y"  secretary,  peticon. 

Gent° : 
Wee  cannot  but  take  notice  of  yo"^  clajme  vnto  and  disposing  of  the  lands 
in  the  Pequot  countrje,  wherein  wee  haue  alwajes  challenged  an  interest,  and 
yet  see  not  reason  to  lay  doune  the  same.     Wee  haue  pervsed  the  judgment 


316 


THE  RECOEDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1657. 


23  October. 


of  the  comissioners  in  46  &  47,  that  the  jurisdiccoa  on  the  west  side  of  Pe- 
quot  Riuer  ought  to  belong  to  Conecticott  till  the  Massachusetts  shew  reason 
to  the  contrary,  against  which  wee  shall  not  at  present  object,  conceiving 
thereby  our  title  to  the  lands  on  the  east  side  the  riuer  to  be  (at  least  tacitly) 
yeilded  to  vs,  notw"'standing  w"^*"  yow  haue  proceeded  to  dispose  of  those 
lands  to  diuerse  persons,  and  to  exercise  jurisdiccon  ouer  them,  w"'''  wee  cannot 
but  take  notice  of  and  declare  to  be  jp'judicjall  to  oiu-  right,  and  therefore  doe 
desire  &  expect  yow  doe  freindly  yeild  vp  those  aforesajd  lands  on  the  east 
side  of  Pequot  Riuer  vnto  vs,  and  that  yow  doe  not  further  proceede  to  exercise 
authoritje  ouer  the  inhabitants  there,  or  to  be  greivous  to  them  w^'out  theire 
oune  consent,  till  the  matter  be  determined  according  to  the  articles  of  confoed- 
eration  ;  if  (at  least)  yo''  oune  justice  shall  not  fvaile  w""  yow  to  yeild  it  to  vs 
w^'out  that  trouble,  wee  are  at  present  to  make  knoune  our  clajme  to  yow  by 
a  peticon  ^sented  to  vs  from  the  inhabitants  there.  Supposing  it  will  not  be 
vnacceptable  to  yow  that  this  buisnes  be  issued  peaceably  &  freindly,  accord- 
ing to  the  relation  wherein  wee  necessarily  stand  engaged,  wee  shall  not  ad 
further  at  present,  but  coinitt  yow  to  God,  and  rest  yo''  ^. 


Hamton  & 

Salisbury 

bounds. 


Wee,  whose  names  are  heere  vnto  subscribed,  being  appointed  by  the 
honnored  Generall  Court  to  consider  and  determine  the  bounds  betweene  y* 
two  tounes  of  Hampton  and  Salisbury,  we  having  binn  vpon  the  lands  in 
diiference  betweene  the  sajd  tounes,  and  having  heard  the  allegations  on  both 
sides,  doe,  according  to  our  best  light  and  vnderstanding,  determine,  after  due 
observacon  of  all  former  orders,  as  followeth,  viz. :  That  the  bounds  betweene 
the  two  tounes  menconed  towards  the  sea  is  to  be  vpon  a  streight  Ijne  be- 
gining  at  the  midle  of  Hampton  Riuer  mouth,  and  runing  vpwards  vnto  a 
marked  tree,  being  and  standing  at  the  vppermost  corner  of  the  farme  coiuon- 
ly  called  M'  Batchilers  farme,  the  sajd  Ijne  to  ruune  vpon  a  west  north  west 
pointe  of  the  compasse  nearest,  and  the  sajd  lyne  being  so  runne  by  both 
tounes,  &  marked  out  according  as  Capt  Shapleigh  hath  now  drawne  the  platt. 
Wee  agree,  vpon  consideracon  of  all  pleas,  that  the  toune  of  Salisbury  shall 
haue  and  enjoy  thirty  acres  of  marsh  on  the  north  side  of  the  sajd  Ijne  towards 
Hampton,  at  the  lower  end  of  the  sajd  Ijne,  to  be  lajd  out  by  both  tounes, 
and  adjoyning  to  the  Ijne.  Also  for  the  vpper  Ijne  into  the  woods  wee  deter- 
mine that  the  Ijne  shall  runne  from  the  marked  tree  before  mencSned 
vpon  a  west  and  by  north  Ijne,  nearest  according  as  Captajne  Shapleigh  hath 
given  in  the  Ijne  of  the  treading  of  Meremacke  Riuer,  the  which  wee  conclude 
to  be  the  bounds  betweene  the  sajd  two  tounes,  vnto  theire  vtmost  extent 
towards  Hauerill.     Wee  doe  further  declai-e,  that  what  mai-sh  the  toune  of 


T':iB    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  317 

Salisbury  hath  lajd  out  to  any  of  theire  inhabitants  that  shall  fall  w"'in  the  16  5  7. 
lyne  *aboiie  menconed,  towards  Hampton,  they  shall  enjoy,  and  so  much  more  ^'        ' 

as  shall  make  vp  the  whole  thirty  acres,  to  be  lajd  out  belowe  the  proprietjes,  "r,;,^.-.  -, 
if  there  to  be  found,  or  els  aboue,  joyning  to  the  Ijne  ;  and  this  wee  giue  as  Ha^pto„  ^ 
our   determination  in  the  buisnes  to   vs  coiiiitted,  concerning    the    ^misses.  Salisbury 

bounds  set- 

Wittnes  our  hands  this  S*  day  of  the  5  &,  1657.  tied. 

JOHN   APLETON, 
JOSEPH   MEDCALF, 
W«   BARTHOLMEW, 
DAN:   PEARSE. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  retoume  of  the  coinittee  aboue  menconed,  w"^*"  this 
Court  allowes  &  approoves  of,  shall  stand  &  be  a  finall  determinacon  of  y* 
case  in  controQsie  betweene  the  two  tounes. 

In  reference  to  the  case  betweene  M'  Elljott,  in  behalfe  of  the  Indians  of  Ans'  to  M' 

^  .      „    „     ,,  .  Ill-  •~..  1       EUjotts  for  y 

Oguonikongquamesit  &  budbury  men,  in  answer  to  both  theire  peticons,  the  in^i^ng  &  sud. 
Courte  finding  that  the  Indians  had  a  graunt  of  a  touneship  in  y'  place  before  ''"7^  ™^"' 
the  English,  the  Courte  determines  &  orders,  that  M'  Edward  Jackson,  M' 
Thomas  Danforth,  and  M'  Ephrajm  Child,  &  Cap?  Lusher,  or  any  thi-ee  of 
them,  as  a  coinittee,  shall,  with  the  first  convenient  opportunitje,  if  it  maybe 
before  winter,  lay  out  a  touneship  in  y°  sajd  place  of  sixe  thousand  acres 
to  y*  Indjans,  in  which  at  least  shallbe  three  or  fower  hundred  acres  of 
meadow ;  and  in  case  there  be  enough  left  for  a  convenient  touneship  for  the 
Sudbury  men  to  lay  it  out  to  them,  the  graunt  of  M'  Alcocks,  confirmed  by 
the  last  Court,  out  of  both,  excepted  and  reserved ;  the  Indjans  to  haue  the 
hill  on  which  they  are,  and  the  rest  of  the  land  to  be  lajd  out  adjoyning  to  it, 
as  may  be  convenient  to  both  plantacons. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticSn  of  Samuel  Hide,  of  Cambridge,  execcutor  to  y»  last  Ans'  to  Sam- 

uell  Hides 

will  &  testament  of  Richard  Oldam,  deceased,  declaring  that  by  y*  advice  of  peticon. 
M'  Edward  Jackson,  ouerseer  to  y^  sajd  will,  he  had  bargained  &  sold  vnto 
Thomas  Broune  the  houses  Sc  lands  whereof  the  sajd  Richard  djed  seized, 
they  being  vncapable  of  improovement,  for  the  behoofe  of  the  children,  vpon 
condicttn  of  securitje  to  be  given  by  y'  sajd  Thomas  Broune  for  discharge  of 
the  childrens  porcSns  according  to  theire  fathers  will,  &  therefore  humbly 
desires  this  honnored  Court  would  be  pleased  to  confirme  the  sajd  bargine, 
that  future  damage  may  be  prevented  to  him,  the  Sd  peticoner,  &  his  family 
relactins,  who  hath  thus  improoved  his  labor  and  travajle  for  the  provission  & 
well  ordering  of  the  estate  of  the  ffatherles  and  widdow.     The  Court,  having 


318 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Cannidge  dis- 
charged at 
present. 


Deacon  Parkes 
ag*  Lef'  Kich. 
Cooke. 


[*268.] 

M'  Jocelyn  & 
M'  Jourdans 
non  appear- 
ance. 

Jn"^  Mellowes 
200  acres. 


W™  &  Armi- 
tages  case  re- 
ferd  to  Elec- 
tion Court. 


Courts  judg- 
ment in  y* 
casobetweene 
M'  Jn^  Ooggan 
&  Ric. 
Wodey. 


Order  for  an 
addition  to  y« 
country  rate. 

Office  of  audi- 
tor gen^^  ceast. 


considered  of  this  peticon,  &  spake  w*  M"'  Jackson,  doe  judge  meete  to  graunt 
the  peticbners  request,  so  as  the  purchaser,  Thomas  Broune,  who  marrjed  the 
widdow,  doe  put  in  security  to  this  Comt  of  eighty  pounds  into  this  Court 
for  the  due  payment  of  the  childrens  porcons,  &  that  the  land  also  ingaged  as 
further  secuiitje,  reserving  y"  late  widdows  right  of  dower,  according  to  lawe. 

In  the  case  of  Gregory  Cassell,  the  Court,  vejwing  and  considering  of 
the  evidences  on  file  against  him,  the  cheife  whereof  being  out  of  this  juris- 
diccbn,  &  not  to  be  had,  the  Court  judged  it  meete  to  discharge  him  at 
present,  he  giving  in  his  oune  securitje  to  value  of  one  hundred  pounds,  that, 
on  notice  from  authoritje,  he  shall  appeare  to  answer  what  shall  be  lajd  against 
him  in  reference  to  the  vntjmely  death  of  Mathew  Cannidge. 

In  the  accbn  of  the  case  betweene  Deacon  W""  Parkes  &  Left  Richard 
Cooke,  brought  to  this  Court  by  y*  Magis''*  nou  acceptance  of  the  jurys  verdict 
at  y'  County  Court  in  July,  held  at  Boston,  after  all  the  evidences  were  read 
&  pvsed,  the  accon  was  w^drawue  by  consent  of  partjes,  they  agreeing 
about  it. 

•M"^  Henry  Jocelyn  &  M"^  Robert  Jom-dan  were  called  by  the  marshall 
generall  to  make  theire  appearances  before  the  Generall  Court,  according  to 
theire  suiuons,  by  themselves,  or  others  in  theire  behalfe,  three  tjmes,  but  they 
nor  none  for  them  appeared. 

In  the  case  of  Abraham  Mellowes  &  M'  Joseph  Hills,  it  was  voted  by 
the  Generall  Court  mett  together,  that  the  two  hundred  acres  formerly 
graunted  to  Abrahame  Mellowes  &  his  heires  or  assignes  is  due,  &  the  inherit- 
ance of  John  Mellowes. 

Tho  Willjams  appeared  by  his  attourney,  Edward  Colcord,  the  secretary, 
by  order  of  M"'  Payne,  engaging  for  y'^  charge  of  both  bowses,  &  Majo' 
Hauthorn,  in  behalf  of  Joseph  Armitage,  engaging  for  the  like,  the  whole 
Court  mett  together  voted,  that  the  case  betweene  Thomas  W"'  &  Joseph 
Armitage  should  be  referd  to  y">  next  Generall  Court,  in  May  next,  to  be 
heard,  M'hen  both  partjes  are  enjoyned  to  appeare. 

In  answer  to  the  peticbns  of  M''  John  Coggan  and  Richard  Wooddey, 
referring  to  the  seventy  pounds  as  the  estate  of  John  Wooddey,  child  of  Jn° 
"Wooddey  deceased,  after  a  full  hearing  of  what  both  partjes  could  say,  the 
whole  Court  mett  together  voted,  that  the  seventy  pounds  belong  to  Mary, 
the  mother. 

Itt  was  ordered,  that  the  Tresurer  issue  out  his  warrant  to  y"  counstables 
of  euery  toune  forthwith,  for  the  gathering  of  one  quarter  parte  more  to  this 
yeares  rate,  towards  the  defraying  the  country  debts. 

It  was  voted  by  the  -ndiole  Court  mett  together,  that  the  office  of  auditor 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW  ENGLAND.  319 

gennerall  shall  from  henceforth  cease,  and  all   lawes   referiiig   to  y"  aiidito''      1  G  5  7. 
generall  shall  henceforth  be  accompted  as  referring  to  the  Tresurer  of  the    "'       '       ^ 

23  October. 

countrje. 

Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  Capl  Thomas  Savage,  Cap?  Lusher,  &  M''  Thomas  Comittee  to 
Danforth,  or  any  three  of  them,  are  appointed  a  coiuittee  to  take  y""  Tresurers  ^^^^^  ^^j.^, 
accompt  betwixt  this  &  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

In  answer  to  the  request  of  Ricliard  Fellowes,  humbly  desiring  the  Ans'  to  Rich 
lionnored  Court  to  graunt  him  two  hundred  acres  of  vpland  and  meadow,  to  request, 
be  lajd  out  to  him  at  Checcopcy  River  by  George  Colton  &  Benjamin  Cooley, 
that  the  sd  land  &  stocke  be  rate  free,  promising  &  ingaging,  in  consideracou 
thereof,  to  build  ii  bowse  there  for  the  entertainement  of  travajlers,  both  for 
house  roome  for  horse  and  man,  &  some  lodging  &  provicon  for  both,  w"* 
beere,  wine,  and  strong  licquors,  if  this  Court  shall  see  mcete  to  require  it, 
the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  his  request,  provided  the  peticoner  build 
an  howse  w"'in  one  yeare,  and  majntajne  the  same  for  seven  yeares,  fitt  to 
entertajne  &  accoiuodate  straingers. 

Itt  was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  Capt  Robert  Bridges  shall  haue  Capt.  Robert 
thirty  two  pounds  one  shilling  &  eight  pence  allowed  him  for  his  sallery.  "  ^^^  * 

*  Whereas  the  Generall  Court  were  pleased  to  depute  vs,  whose  names  are      [*269.] 
subscribed,  to  heare  and  informe  ourselves  of  the  state  of  Cambridge,  and  of  •*^'"''  *°  ^^™- 

bridge  pe- 

the  inlaabitants  on  the  other  side  of  the  riuer,  wee,  having  labored  therein,  ticconers,  &6. 
doe  present  our  conceavings,  as  the  condition  of  either  party  is  presented  to 
vs,  as  followeth :  — 

1..  Wee  conceive  that  if  the  peticoners  should  w^draue  theire  help  from 
theire  contributing  to  Cambridg  church  and  ministry,  it  would  be  over  bur- 
densome to  Cambridge  to  provide  honnorably  for  theire  carrying  an  end  those 
occasions ;  1.  Because  it  is  acknowledged  on  both  partjes  the  majnetenance  at 
present  is  short  enough,  and  our  charitje  leadeth  vs  to  beleive  they  want 
not  love  either  to  theire  minister  or  ministrje.  2.  Because  wee  know  some 
considerable  persons  haue  removed  on  such  groundes,  and  others  seeme  to 
intend  it,  tho  indeered  to  the  present  ministrje  amongst  them,  and  many  of 
them  in  an  ebbing  conditjon  referring  to  outward  things. 

2.  Referring  to  the  brethren  who  haue  petitioned  freedome  to  be  in  a  way 
of  providing  for  theire  supplye  of  a  minister  amongst  them,  who  doe  tender 
tenn  pounds  p  anum  towards  Cambridge  ministrje,  tho  wee  acknowledge  they 
are  exposed  to  tempting  difhcultjcs  to  moove,  yett  it  seems  not  convenient  at 
the  present  to  seperate  from  theire  brethren  ;  1.  In  regard  of  the  feared  inca- 
pacitje  amongst  themselves  to  effect   theire    desires ;    2.  In  regard  of   some 


2S  October. 


320  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1657.  decljning  as  to  prosecution  of  the  worke  amongst  themselves  ;  3.  Considering 
how  greivous  it  is  to  theire  brethren,  who  professe  much  care  of  &  respect 
vnto  them,  which  wee  conceive  may  moove  them  still  to  wajte  on  the  Lord, 
in  the  expectation  of  a  further  discouery  of  his  minde  heerein  as  referring  to 
either  partje. 

Yo'  servants,  y«  cofaittee, 

RICHARD  RUSSELL, 
ELJAZER  LUSHER, 
EPHRAJM  CHILD. 

The  whole  Court  mett  together  voted  the  acceptance  of  this  retourne. 
23  :  8  A,  57,  this  Court  was  dissolved. 


Att  a    Generall    Courte    of  Electjon,  held   at   Boston,  the   19"'  of 

May,  1658. 

JOHN   ENDECOTT,  Es^*,  was  chosen  Governo',  &  tooke  his  oath,  & 
Coinission''. 
Richard  Bellingham,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep'  Gove'',  &  tooke  his  oath. 


&  Comission''. 

Assistants,  &  tooke  theire 
oaths. 


M"^  Symon  Bradstreete  was  chosen  Assistant, 

M'  Samuell  Symonds, 

Capt  Thomas  Wiggins,  were  chosen 

Capt  Daniell  Gookine, 

Majo''  Daniell  Dennjson,  in  reserue,  3. 

Majo'  Symon  Willard, 

Majo'  Humphrey  Atherton, 

Edward  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretary. 

M"^  Richard  Russell  was  chosen  Tresurer. 

The   names   of  the  Depu'*  retourned  from  y^   tonnes  to   serve  at  this 
Court :  — 

Majo''  W'°  Hawthorne,  M''  Henry  Bartholmew,  Salem. 

M'  Richard  Russell,  Cap?  Erauncis  Norton,  Charles  Toun. 

M'  Jn°  Wisewall,  M'  W'°  Soumner,  Dorchester. 

Capt  Tho  Clarke,  Capt  Edw  Hutchinson,  Boston. 

M'  Jn°  Johnson,  M''  Jn"  Rugles,  Roxbury. 

M''  Jn°  Coolage,  M"^  Jn°  WincoU,  Water  Toune; 

M'  Tho  Layton,  Lynn. 


""> — — 
19  May. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  321 

• 

M"^  Edw  Collins,  M'  Tho  Danforth,  Cambridg.  1658. 

jyjr  -vvm  Hubbard,  Lef?  Jn"  Apleton,  Ipswich. 

Left  Jn"  Pike,  Newbury. 

M""  Tho  Dyer,  Weimouth. 

Capt  Josh  Hubbard,  W  Jer:  Houchin,  Hingham. 

M''  Robt  Merriam,  Concord. 

Left  Josh  Fisher,  Sarj:  Danj:  Fisher,  Dedham. 

Lef!  Robt  Pike,  Salisbury. 

Left  Chris?  Hussey,  Hampton. 

Maxim  I  Jewett,  Rowley. 

M'  Peter  Bracket,  Brajntry. 

Cap?  Rich  Waldern,  Doner. 

Capt  Edw  Johnson,  Wooborne. 

Lef?  Charles  Frost,  Kettery.  ^ 

Cap?  Bria  Pendleton,  Portsmouth. 
M''  Edw  Rushworth,  Yorke. 
M'  W"  Coudi-ey,  Redding. 

M'  Richard  Russell  chosen  Speaker  for  y®  session. 

*That  Quakers  and  such  accursed  hasreticques  arising  amongst  ourselves      [*270.] 
may  be  dealt  withall    according  to  theire  deserts,  and  that  theire    pestilent  Addition  to  y 

•'  "  lawes  of  Qua- 

errors  and  practizes  may  speedily  be  prevented,  itt  is  heereby  ordered,  as  an  kers. 
addition  to  the  former  lawe  against  Quakers,  that  euery  such  person  or  persons 
professing  any  of  thehe  pernitious  wajes,  by  speaking,  writting,  or  by  meet- 
ings on  the  Lords  day,  or  any  other  tjme,  to  strengthen  themselves  or  seduce 
others  to  theire  djabolljcall  doctrine,  shall,  after  due  meanes  of  conviction,  in- 
curre  the  poenalty  ensuing ;  that  is,  euery  person  so  meeting  shall  pay  to  the 
countrje  for  euery  tjme  teun  shillings,  and  euery  one  speaking  in  such  meet- 
ing shall  pay  five  pounds  a  peece,  and  in  case  any  such  person  hath  biiin 
punished  by  scourging  or  whipping  the  first  tjme,  according  to  the  former 
lawes,  shallbe  still  kept  at  worke  in  the  house  of  correction  till  they  put  in 
securitje  w"'  two  sufficjent  men  that  they  shall  not  any  more  vent  theire  hate- 
full  errors,  nor  vse  theire  sinfull  practizes,  or  els  shall  depart  this  jurisdic- 
tjon  at  theire  oune  charges ;  and  if  any  of  them  returne  againe,  then 
each  such  person  shall  incurre  the  poenalty  of  the  lawes  formerly  made  for 
straingers.  Comission" 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  &  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  County  ™  '""n"" 

•'  '^  power  to  raurry 

Courts  of  each  shire,  vpon  request  of  the  tounes,  shall  appointe  one  of  the  &  giue  oaths. 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  41 


322  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  58.      three  comissioners  appointee!  to  end  smale  cawscs  in  the  seuerall  tonnes  to 

^    "^    solemnize  marrjage,  and  also  to  giue  oathes  to  persons  iu  all  civill  cases.     This 

law  to  continew  till  y"  next  Genii  Court. 

Claiks,  sar-  Itt    is    ordered    by    tliis    Court    &    authoritje    thereof,  that    henceforth 

""^ii  \   /^"'P"'  all  sargents,  clarkes,  and  corporalls  chosen  in  any  millitary  company  in  this 

lowed  of  by  y«  jnrisdictjon  shall  be  allowed  of  by  the  County  Courts  as  well  as  coiiiission 

County  Courts. 

officers,  or  els  not  to  be  accepted  to  theire  places,  &  captajnes  are  hereby  re- 

quii'ed  not  to  install  them  before  approbation  so  attayned. 

Bridges  &  Whereas  inconvenjencjes  &  daingers  arise  vpon  bridges  &  passages  that 

.   ,    ^^^^'.    ,    ly  vpon  toune  high  wayes,  some  of  which  belong  vnto  the  toune,  others  to 

particcular  persons,  being  of  publicise  and  frequent  passage  both  for  toune  and 

countrje,  and  many  tjmes  the  safety  of  persons  is  hazarded  for  want  of  theire 

tjmely  repajre,  although  those  tonnes  or  persons  would  doe  it,  yet  cannot 

procure  workemen  to  effect  the  same,  it  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court  and 

the  authoritje  thereof,  that  vpon  the  complaint  of  any  such  toune  or  person  to 

any  one  magistrate,  he  shall  hereby  be  impowred  to  issue  forth  warrant  to  the 

counstable  to  impresse  such  workemen  in  theire  oune  touneships  as  shall  be 

needefuU  to  secure  &  repajre  the  same,  who  shall  be  pajd  for  theire  worke, 

either  by  the  toune  or  persons  to  whom  such  bridges  or  passages  doe  belong. 

Prices  of  corne  There  being  an  order  made  by  this  Court  in  October  last,  wherein  the 

prizes  of  corne  of  all  sorts  were  stated,  not  only  as  it  had  referrence  to  the 

countrje  levy,  but  also  in  other  payments,  as  in  that  orde^  doth  appeare,  this 

Court,  in  consideration  that  it  falls  below  the  currant  price,  occasioned  through 

the  scarsitje  of  corne,  doth  hereby  order  the  repealing  of  that  clause  of  the 

aforesajd  order  respecting  payments  betweene  man  and  man. 

[*271.]  *Whereas  there  is  a  lawe  respecting  the   regulateing  of  swyne  in  all 

Order  to  regu-   touneships,  to  prevent  harmes   donne  by  them,  yett  inasmuch  as  there  is  a 
late  swyne.  .  .        .  „  . 

necessitje  of  a  more  pticcular  order  resi:)ecting  such  tonnes  wherein  great  noum- 

bers  of  swyne  are  kept,  whereby  many  children  are  exposed  to  great  daingers 

of  losse  of  life  or  Ijmbe  tlu'ough  the  ravenousnese  of  s^vyne,  and  elder  persons 

to  no  smale  inconvenjencjes,  beside  the  sad  consequences  it  may  be  off  to  the 

whole  countrje  in  tjmes  of  sickness  through  theire  infection,  it  is  therefore 

ordered  by  this  Coiut  &  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  selectmen  in  the  seuerall 

tonnes  w^in  this  jui-isdictjon  shall  henceforth  haue  power  to  make  such  orders 

in  reference  to  swjne  as  may  prevent  all  manner  of  damage ;  &  ffurther,  it  is 

ordered,  that  if  any  person  or  persons  appointed  to  see  to  the  execution  of  such 

orders  shall  neglect  the  trust  coiiiitted  to  them,  or  refuse  to  accept  of  such 

service,  he  shall  forfeite  for  euery  such  neglect  the  some  of  five  pounds,  the 

one  halfe  to  the  toune,  the  other  half  to  the  partje  that  holds  the  place  and 

performes  this  duty  therein. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  323 

Whereas    in   the    lawe    made    in    the   yearc    1648    respecting    troopers,      16  58. 
amongst  other  priviledges  graunted  vnto  them,  they  were  ferry  free  fiom  and    ""^^"^^^ 
to  the  place  of  exercise,  this  Court,  on  a  motion  made  Horn  &  w"»  the  consent  Troopers  ferri 
of  severall  of  the  troopers,  thinke  meete  to  repeale  that  cLawse  of  the  lawe,  ^S*^^  t''''^"  °S- 
and  they  to  pay  for  theire  ffcrriage  as  others  doe. 

Whereas  it  is  aprehended  that  there  is  a  great  wrong  to  the  countrje  that  Impost  of 

-  jTff.      ^J"^^  relating 

the  lawe  enjoyning  all  vintno"  and  taverno"'"  to  pay   alter  the  rate  ot  ttittty  to  yintnors  & 
shillings  a  butt  or  pipe  to  the  vse  of  the  countrje  is  not  duly  observed,  accord-  *jj^™"^  '^ 
ing  to  the  intent  of  the  sajd  lawe,  notw"=standing  the  advantage  to  the  sajd 
taverno^  and  vintno''"  is  to  the  ffuU  if  not  more  then  a  meete  allowance  for 
such  impost,  this  Court  doth  therefore  order,  that  if  any  taverno'  or  vintno' 
allowed  to  retayle  wines  shall  not,  according  to  the  lawe,  w*in  three  dajes 
after  the  buying  of  any   vessell  of  wines,   enter  the   same  w"^  the  countrje 
Tresurer,  or  such  as  he  shall  appointe  to  be  his  deputje,  he  shall  forfeite  the 
sajd  wines,  or  the  ffuU  worth  thereof,  the  one  halfe  to  the  vse  of  the  countrje, 
and  the  other  halfe  to  be  divided,  the  one  halfe  to  the  Tresui-er,  the  other 
halfe  to  the  informer.     And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  the  sajd  impost  shall, 
from  tjme  to  tjme,  be  pajd  in  wjnes  at  merchants  price,  or  other  tequivolent 
marchantable  and  good  pay,  to  the  content  of  the  Tresurer,  and  that  the  Tres- 
urer take  speciall  care  for  collecting  the  sajd  impost,  who  is  also  hereby  im- 
powred  to  substitute  such  dcputjes  vnder  him  as  he  shall  see   meete  in  the 
seuerall  tounes  ffor  his  helpe  and  ffurtherance  heerein ;  ffor  all  which  pajnes 
and   cai-e    he    shallbe   allowed    two  shillings  in  the   pound  of   all   such  im- 
posts as  he  shall  bring  into  his  annuall  account  w""  the  countrje  ;  provided 
alwajes,  that  if  any  vintno"-  or  taverno^  retayler  of  wjnes,  shall  give  an  ac- 
compt  to  the  Tresurer  of  any  pte  of  any  wjnes,  entered  as  abouesajd,  that  he 
hath  sold  away  againe  by  wholesale,  being  no  lesse  in  quantitje  then  a  quarter 
caske,  to  one  person  at  one  tjme,  and  shall  truly  certify  the  persons  who  had 
it,  &  tjme  when  such  person  or  persons,  shall  be  abated  of  theire  impost  in 
proportion  to  what  they  haue  so  sold. 

For  the  avoyding  of  all  futui-e  differences  betweene  the  respective  coun-  Order  regulat- 
tjes,  by  the  di-awing  of  fines  and  other  dues  from  persons  that  live  in  one  ^^^^  county, 
county  vnto  the  treasury  of  another  countje,  it  is  ordered  by  this  Coui-t  and  the  &<=• 
authoritje  thereof,  that  all  fines  arising  in  any  County  Court,  or  by  order  of  one 
magistrate  or  comissioners  impowred  in  crjminall  cases,  shall,  from  tjme  to  tjme, 
be  pajd  into  the  treasury  of  that  countje  where  such  delinquent  party  do  dwell, 
excepting  only  where  any  person  shall  be  taken  in  y*  manner,  and  imedjately 
censured  by  y*  authoritje  in  any  other  county  where  such  offence  is  comitted. 

♦Whereas  there  is  much  inconvenjence  to  divers  sorts  of  people  by  the      [*272.] 


324 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1658. 

19  May. 
March's  liberty 
to  sell  strong 
waters,  wine,  & 
cidar  by  retayle 
not  less  then  3 
gallons,  strong 
waters  not 
aboue  one  qrt. 


Expenc  of 
tjme  about  y" 
Indians 
coiiiended  to 
y  considera- 
con  of  y« 
comissioners. 


lawe  that  prohibitts  any  to  sell  ■wine  vnder  a  quarter  caske,  excepting  only 
such  as  had  license  thereto,  as  also  to  retayle  strong  waters,  or  cydar,  it  being 
the  mjude  of  the  Coiut  only  to  prevent  abuses,  and  not  to  debarre  the  lawfull 
sale  and  vse  thereof,  either  for  payments  of  debts  or  svpply  of  persons  neces- 
sitjes,  itt  is  therefore  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that 
henceforth  it  shall  be  lawfuU  for  any  wholesale  merchant  of  wines,  or  the 
present  stillers  of  strong  waters,  being  of  masters  of  familjes,  or  such  as  re- 
ceive the  same  from  forraigne  parts  in  cases,  botles,  &6,  or  makers  of  cydars, 
to  sell  by  retayle,  provided  the  quantitje  of  wine  &  cydar  be  not  lesse  then 
three  gallons  at  a  tjme  to  one  person,  nor  strong  waters  lesse  then  one  quart, 
and  that  it  be  only  to  masters  of  familjes  of  good  &  honnest  report,  or  persons 
going  to  sea,  and  that  they  sufler  not  any  person  to  diinke  the  same  in  theire 
houses,  cellars,  or  yards. 

Itt  being  found  by  long  experience  that  a  great  part  of  tjme,  if  not  the 
greatest,  which  is  spent  by  oiu-  honnored  comissioner  of  the  Vnited  Colonjes 
at  theire  annuall  meetings  is  about  affajres  relating  to  the  Indians,  the  charge 
of  which  hath  hitherto  binn  put  vpon  the  account  of  the  English,  notw'''stand- 
ing  the  litle  or  no  benefitt  accrewing  to  vs  thereby,  which  this  Court  consider- 
ing of,  doe  heereby  order  it  be  comended  to  the  consideratjon  of  the  comis- 
sioners at  theire  next  meeting  by  the  honnored  coinissioners  of  this  colony, 
that  some  proportionable  allowance  maybe  made,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  for  & 
towards  the  charge  of  the  Indian  buisnes,  as  in  theii-e  wisdomes  they  shall 
judge  most  meete. 


Constables 
office  &  poir'. 


The  office  &  power  of  a  counstable,  collected  out  of  the  seuerall  lawes  of  this 

coUony. 

1.  To  whipp  &  punish  any  that  are  to  be  punished,  by  order  of  author- 
ity, where  there  is  no  other  appointed  in  that  toune  wherein  he  dwells,  or  to 
provide  it  to  be  donne.     Ljb.  1,  page  13. 

2.  To  send  and  convey  persons  from  connstable  to  connstable,  altho  they 
come  from  forraigne  parts,  vntill  they  be  brought  to  the  place  they  are  sent, 
or  before  some  magistrate.     Ljb.  1,  pag.  13. 

3.  To  speede  away  all  hues  &  crys,  to  effect  &  to  signe  them,  where  no 
magistrate  is  neere  at  hand,  ag'  theeves,  robbers,  murderers,  manslajers,  peace- 
breakers,  &  other  capitoU  ofFendors,  on  poenalty  of  forty  shillings  for  neglect 
in  capitall  crimes.      1  ljb.,  page  14. 

4.  To  ap^hend  w^'out  warrant  such  as  be  overtaken  w*  drincke,  swear- 
ing, Saboath  breaking,  lying,  vagrant  persons,  night  walkers,  being  taken  in 
the  manner  by  himself  or  ^sent  information,  and  to  keejje  them  safe  in  cus- 
tody till  they  cann  cai'ry  them  before  a  magistrate.    1  ljb.,  p.  13  ;  ljb.  4,  p.  16, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  325 


19  May. 


5.  To  search  for  all  such  persons  In  any  suspected  or  disordered  place,      1  G  5  8. 
and  in  houses  licensed  to  sell  beere  &  wine,  on  pccnalty  of  tenn  shillings 
for  eucry  neglect,  being  informed  or  req^mred  thereto.      1  Ijb.,  p.  13  &  31, 
tit.  Drunkcness. 

6.  Xot  to  apphcnd  any  person  by  order  of  any  magistrate  w"'out  war- 
rant in  writing.     Ljb.  4,  p.  16. 

7.  To  warne  any  person  to  asist  him,  &  none  to  refuse  on  poenalty  of 
tenn  shillings ;  &  if  it  appeare  to  be  obstinately  &  contemptously  donne,  then 
to  pay  forty  shillings.      1  ljb.,  p.  19. 

*8.  To  carry  his  black  stafFe  in  the  execution  of  his  office,  that  none  may      [*273.] 
pleade  ignorance.     Ljb.  1,  page  13. 

9.  To  take  notice  of  coiiion  coasters,  vnprofitable  fowlers,  &  other  idle 
psons,  &  tobacco  takers,  &  P"'  them  to  the  two  next  Asistants  ;  Ljb.  1,  p.  26 ; 
and  of  such  as  shall  harbor  any  young  people,  children,  servants,  apprentices, 
students,  or  schollers,  &  not  hasten  them  to  theire  respective  implojments, 
and  to  act  therein  as  is  provided  in  refference  to  the  lawe  of  iukeepers. 
Ljb.  1,  p.  27. 

10.  To  ajd  the  costome  masters  of  wines,  &S,  in  helping  them  to  breake 
open  any  place,  cellar,  &d,  where  the  owno''  shall  refuse  to  deljver  theire  keyes 
peaceably.     Ljb.  1,  p.  27. 

11.  To  levy  all  fines  imposed  by  a  magistrate  or  comissioner,  &  all  rates 
&  fines  for  the  country  &  county,  by  order  from  the  respective  Tresurers,  & 
y'  speedily,  on  poenalty  of  being  distrained  by  the  Tresurer,  &  for  that  end 
are  impowred  to  levy  the  same,  although  out  of  theire  office.  Ljb.  1,  page 
46  ;  ljb.  3,  p.  2,  3. 

12.  To  gather  all  toune  rates  coinitted  to  them  by  the  selectmen  of  the 
place  where  they  dwell.     Ljb.  4,  page  26. 

13.  To  cleare  accounts  w**"  the  countrje  Tresurer  annually  by  the  first  of 
May,  on  pccnalty  of  five  pounds  forfeiture.     Ljb.  3,  p.  13. 

14.  Vpon  information  given  by  the  finder,  to  enter  all  lost  goods  or 
strajes  vnder  twenty  shillings  vallew  in  a  booke,  &  cry  the  same  at  three  gen- 
erall  toune  meetings  or  lectures,  and  if  aboue  twenty  shillings  vellew,  at  the 
next  markett,  or  two  next  tounes  publicke  meetings  where  no  markett  is  w"'in 
tenn  miles,  vpon  pccnalty  of  forfeiting  one  third  pt  of  the  valew  thereof. 
Ljb.  1,  p.  48. 

15.  To  present  the  names  of  such  persons  as  shall  refuse  to  watch  & 
ward,  or  to  hire  a  sufficijent  person  in  theire  roome,  to  the  next  magistrate,  & 
to  beginne  the  constables  watch  annually  May  1*',  &  not  giue  ouer  till  the  last 
of  September,  on  pccnalty  of  five  pounds,  and  to  see  that  the  majo''  pait  of 


326  THE  REC0KD3  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

the  watch  be  sixfficijent  able  men,  &  not  youths,  &  to  observ  the  directions  of 
the  selectmen  therein  ;  Ijb.  4,  pag.  12,  25 ;  Ijb.  1,  pag.  51  ;  &  to  give 
watchmen  tlieire  charge  according  to  the  law  expressing  the  same.  Ljb.  1, 
p.   16. 

16.  To  secure,  by  comittment  or  otherwise,  any  inhabitant  or  strainger 
after  tenne  of  the  clocke  at  night,  behaving  themselves  deboist,  or  that  giveth 
not  a  reasonable  ground  to  y"  connstable  or  watchman,  or  shallbe  in  drincke, 
till  the  lawe  be  sattisfied ;  ljb.  4,  p.  16  j  &  the  connstable  is  to  carry  them 
before  a  magistrate  next  morning. 

17.  To  provide  &  buy,  at  the  tounes  charge,  all  weights  and  measures 
required  by  law  for  toune  standards  ;  &  vpon  warrant  from  the  touue  sealer 
to  warne  all  the  inhabitants  to  bring  in  theire  weights  &  measures  to  be  trjed 
&  sealed,  &  to  make  retourne  in  writting  the  names  of  all  persons  so  sumoned, 
on  poenalty  of  forty  shillings.     Ljb.  1,  p.  51. 

18.  To  serve  all  attachments  directed  to  them  in  any  civill  case,  and  make 
retourne  thereof  to  the  Court  in  season.     Ljb.  1,  p.  55,  tit.  Praesid''. 

19.  To  warne  the  freemen  of  theire  toune  in  the  2'*  weeke  of  March 
annually  to  meete  together,  to  give  in  theire  votes  for  nomination  of  magis- 
trates &  chojce  of  county  Tresurers,  &  to  acquainte  the  ffreemen  w*''  the 
retourne  of  the  names  of  such  as  be  nominated.     Ljb.  2,  p.  10. 

20.  To  make  retourne  vnder  theire  hands  of  the  names  of  the  deputjes, 
and  for  w*  time  chosen,  on  poenalty  of  twenty  shillings.     Ljb.  3,  p.  9. 

21.  To  pay  the  marshall  gen"  three  pence  out  of  euery  attachment  by 
them  served.     Ljb.  4,  p.  20. 

To  execute  all  warrants  from  the  recorder  of  any  Court  for  chojce  of 
jurymen,  &  to  warne  the  persons  chosen,  &  make  retourne  of  theire  proces  to 
the  recorder.     Lib.  1,  p.  32. 
[*274.]  *22.    In  cass  of  vntimely  or   unnatural  death  of  any  person,  to  suiiion  a 

jury  of  twelve  discreete  men,  to  enquire  of  the  cause  &  manner  of  theire 
death,  who  shall  give  in  a  true  virdict  thereof  to  the  next  Asistant  or  Court 
of  y'  shire,  on  oath.     Ljb.  1,  p.  16. 

23.  To  give  warning  vnto  any  inhabitants  of  theire  toune,  w^'er  men  or 
weomen,  that  live  from  theire  husbands  or  wives,  to  appeare  at  the  next 
Court  of  y'  county  to  ans'  for  theire  so  doing,  ljb.  1,  p.  37,  on  poenalty  of 
twenty  shillings  for  neglect. 

24.  Not  to  refuse  the  office  of  a  connstable,  being  orderly  chosen 
thereto,  on  pcenalty  of  five  pounds,  &  if  in  Boston,  tenn  pounds  poenalty. 
Ljb.  4,  p.  18. 

25.  In  case  of  any  servants  runing  from  theire  master,  or  inhabitants  going 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  327 

privily   away,  w«>  suspitlon   of  the   intention,  in  j"  absence   of  a  magistrate,      1658. 
the  connstable  and  two  of  the  cheife  inhabitants  is  to  presse  men,  boates,  &  ' 

19  May. 

pinnaces,  at  the  publique  charge,  to  pursue  sucli  persons  by  sea  or  land,  & 
bring  them  backe  by  force  of  amies.     Ljb.  1,  p.  38. 

26.  To  informe  the  Coui-t  of  all  new  comers  that  setle  themselves  -w*''out 
Ijcence,  according  to  lawe.     Ljb  1,  page  39. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  &  y*  authority  thereof,  that  the  office  & 
power  of  a  connstable,  expressed  in  these  twenty  sixe  articles,  be  forthwith 
printed,  that  so  each  connstable  may  vnderstand  his  duty. 

In  answer  to  the  petitjon  of  Abraham  Newell,  in  behalfe  of  John  Bennet,  Ans'  to  Abra- 
his  grandchild,  the   Court   doth  order,  that   the   petitioner   be   referd   to  the  peticon. 
County  Coiu-t  ^  relelfe,  as  in  the  petition  is  desired. 

In  answer  to  the  request  of  the  select  men  of  Boston,  the  Court  judgeth  Courts  gratui- 
it  meete  to  allow  vnto  Boston,  for  and  towards  *he  chardges  of  theire  toune  ^^^^^  ^^  g^^. 
house.  Bostons  proportion  of  one  single  countiy  rate  for  this  yeare  ensuing,  *°°- 
provided  that  sufficijent  roomes  in  the  sajd  house  shall  be  for  euer  free,  for 
the  keeping  of  all  Courts,  &  also  that  the  place  vnderneath  shallbe  free  for  all 
inhabitants  in  this  jurisdiction  to  make  vse  of  as  a  markett  for  euer,  w^out 
payment  of  any  tole  or  tribute  whatsoeuer. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  present  secretary  hereby  is  and  shall  be  impowred  Sccry>  power  to 
to  order  the  accomodation  of  the  comissioners  for  the  Vnited  CoUonjes  at  Bos-    ,  xresurer. 
ton  this  yeare,  in  all  respects,  and  that  whoeuer  he  implojes,  and  what  bills  he 
signes,  the  Treasurer  shall  sattisfy  and  pay. 

The  ffiirmers  of   the  imposte   of  wine,  producing  this  Courts  answ'^  to  Farmers  of  the 
theire   request,  in  May,   1656,  this  Coiut  declares,  that  it  is  the  intent  of  J.^^i'dge.  *" 
the  Court  to  abate  the  farmers  of  the  custome  howse  two  yeares  rent,  &  that 
theiie  bond  to  the  Tresurer  be  given  vp  vnto  them,  &  orders  them  from  henc- 
forth  to  be  dischardged  therefrom. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Majo''  Atherton,  Left  Roger  Clap,  in  steede  of  M''  High  way 
Glouer,  deceased,  Edward  Goffe,  &  Edward  Oakes,  are  appointed  a  comittee  j^j^^  g/- 
to  lay  out  the  way  through  Roxbury  lotts  to  Boston  farmes,  and  to  judg 
what  is  meete  sattisfaction  to  the  proprieto"  for  the  way,  and  that  they  haue 
power  to  impose  an  aequall  part  vpon  all  such  of  Boston  or  other  tounes  as 
shall  haue  benefit  of  such  way,  according  to  former  order  of  Court,  dated 
14">  May,  1645. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  surveyo''  geii  shall  deliucr  vnto  Capt  Frauncls  Chails  Toune 

ponder  al- 

Norton  what  powder  is  due  according  to  order  of  Court  bearing  date  15^''  of  lowed. 


328  THE    KEC0RD3    OF   THE    COLONY    OF 

1658.      October,  1650,  and  hath  not  yett  binn  delivered  to  this  tjme,  as  this  ordei 


enjoynes. 

*The  Court,  on  pervsall  of  the  letter  of  the  Generall  Court  of  Conec- 


19  May. 

[*275.] 
„        .    ,.       ticott,  bearing    date   the   tenth  of  May,    1658,  judge    it  meete  to  referr   the 

letter  refferd  to  consideration    of  that  letter  &  determination  of   the    land  therein  in   ques- 

y«  comissios, 

tion  to  the  comissioners,  whom  it  most  propperly  concerns  to  deale  in  such 

matters. 
No  constant  ,  Whereas  it  is  the   duty  of  the   Clulstian   magistrate   to  take  care  the 

'^robacon'of'2''  psopl®  ^^  ^^^  '"'*''  wholesome  &  sound  doctrine,  &  in  this  houre  of  temptation, 
organicke         wherein  the  enemy  designeth  to  sowe  corrupt  seede,  euery  company  cannot 

churches,  &c. 

be  thought  able  or  fitt  to  judge  of  those  gospell  qualliffications  required  in  the 
publicke  disj)enso"  of  the  word,  and  all  socjetjes  of  Christians  are  bound  to 
attend  order  and  comunion  of  churches,  considering  also  the  rich  blessing 
of  God,  flowing  from  the  good  agreement  of  the  civill  &  church  estate,  and 
the  horrible  mischeifes  and  confusions  that  follow  on  the  contrary,  it  is  there- 
fore ordered,  that  henceforth  no  person  shall  publicquely  &  constantly  preach 
to  any  company  of  people,  whither  in  church  society  or  not,  or  be  ordeyned  to 
the  office  of  a  teaching  elder,  where  any  two  organnlck  churches,  council! 
of  state,  or  Generall  Court  shall  declare  theire  dissatisfaction  thereat,  either 
in  refference  to  doctrine  or  practize,  the  sajd  offence  being  declared  to  the 
sajd  company  of  people,  church,  or  person,  vntill  the  offence  be  orderly  re- 
-^  mooved  ;  and  in  case  of  ordination  of  any  teaching  elder,  tjmely  notice  thereof 
shall  be  given  vnto  tlu'ee  or  fower  of  the  neighboring  organicke  churches,  for 
theire  approbation. 
Courts  ans'  to  In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Capt  Cullicke  &  M'  W""  Goodwine,  in  be- 

^'5  '     halfe  of  themselves  and  others,  the  Court  judgeth  meete  to  graunt  theire  re- 

quest in  reference  to  lands  not  already  graunted,  and  further,  giues  them 
liberty  to  inhabitt  in  any  part  of  this  jurisdictjon  akeady  planted,  provided 
they  submitt  themselves  to  a  due  &  ordeily  hearing  of  the  differences  betweene 
themselves  &  the  rest  of  theire  brethren. 
Ans'  to  Cap'  In  answer  to  the  petitjon  of  Capt  Thomas  Bond,  humbly  desiring  the 

remittment  of  the  hundred  pounds  fine  w"*"  the  law  imposeth  on  him,  &  for 
which  he  hath  given  bond,  for  bringing  in  two  Quakers  into  this  jurisdiction, 
pleading  his  ignorance  of  the  lawe,  the  Courte,  having  heard  the  case  and 
spake  w""  Cap?  Bond,  judge  meete  to  declare  that  the  two  hundred  pounds 
bond  given  into  the  Tresurers  vse  by  him  &  his  surety  shall  stand  good  against 
them  till  certifficat  be  retourned  from  Capt  Pendleton,  or  some  other  person 
of  knoune  credit,  that  the  sajd  Capt  Bond  hath  observed  the  lawe  in  keeping 
the  sajd  Quakers  from  conversing  w"*  any  of  this  jurisdiction  whiles  they  stay 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  329 

heere  on  board  his  sliipp,  &  that  he  or  his  order  hath  carrjed  them  to  England,      16  58. 

or  y"  place  from  whence  they  came,  on  w*'''  ccrtifficate  to  the  secretary,  &  pay-    ' ' "" 

mont  of  two  barrells  of  good  ponder,  in  Icjw  of  twenty  pounds  imposed  on  '^^' 

him  as  a  fine  to  the  country,  his  fine  of  one  lumdred  pounds  shallbe  remitted, 
&  his  bond  to  be  deliuered  vp  &  cancelled. 

The  retourne  of  Edmoud  Goodenow&  Jn"  Hajme,  appointed  by  our  honored 
Generall  Court  held  at  Boston  18  October,  165-1,  to  lay  out  vnto  M"^  Ed- 
mond  Broune,  the  reuerend  pastor  of  the  church  of  Sudbmy,  twenty 
acres  of  meadow  graunted  vnto  him  by  the  same  Court. 

Wee,  finding  in  the  sajd  tract  of  land  no  meadow,  but  lying  in  smale  par-  M'  Brounes 
cells,  lajd  out  the  whole,  although  wee  judg  the  quantite  of  all  lajd  out  by  vs  a'Tatrel  mTad 
short  of  twenty  acres,  in  manner  as  followeth :  Imprimis,  half  an  acre  joyning 
vnto  the  south  Ijne  of  Sudbury  bounds,  the  other  part  of  the  meadow  lying 
w"'in  the  bounds.  Item,  a  long  and  narrow  meadow  lying  vpon  a  smale 
brooke  southward  from  Doe  skin  hill,  and  bounded  vpon  the  vpper  end  w""  a 
marked  oake,  lajd  out,  wee  say,  all  this  long  tract  of  meadow,  conteyning,  by 
estimacon,  about  tenn  acres.  Item,  one  smale  parccll  of  meadow,  conteyning 
an  acre  &  halfe,  w"'  a  parcell  of  fewer  acres  lying  vpon  the  brooke  that  issu- 
eth  out  of  the  former  smale  peece,  &  marked  at  the  extremity  of  it.  Item, 
one  smale  parcell  of  three  acres,  formerly  called  Indjan  Willjams  meadow, 
lying  towards  the  falls  of  Chochittuat  Eiuer. 

Byvs,  EDMOND  GOODENOW, 

JOHN   HAJMES. 

In  answer  to  the  request  of  M'^  Edmond  Broune,  the  Court  allowes  and 
approoves  of  this  retourne. 

*It  is  ordered,  that  the  inhabitants  of  Portsmouth  shall  attend  all  military      [*276.] 
service  vnder  the  coinand  of  Capt  Brjan  Pendleton,  according  to  the  lawes  of  inhabitants  of 

,...,..  Tr»i  ••11         11  y-^  Portsmouth  to 

this  jurisdiction ;  and  further,  it  is  declared,  that  this  Couit  doth  expect  that  observ  all  mil- 
all  the  inhabitants  of  Pascataqua  doe  attend  the  observanc  of  our  lawes,  in  ''-""'y  5<"'^"='' 

'         vnder  com- 

particcular  those  concerning  the  selling  of  strong  liquors,  and  good  order  to  be  mand  of  Capt. 

>,  ■  ,..  11  !/-(  _..  1/r.  Pendleton,  i&u. 

kept  m  ordjnarjes,  and  that  the  Court  comissioners  and  offacers  there  take 
speciall  care  therein. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  James  Neighbor  &  Jn°  Andrews,  the  Court  Ans' to  Neigh 
declares  they  haue  theire  liberty  to  proceede  on  in  a  course  of  lawe,  by  way    "^^  '"^  ''°°' 
of  revejw  or  otheruise,  in  our  Courts  of  judicature,  to  which  they  are  reiferd.  p,"^; °  ^^^ 

In  ans''  to  y''  petition  of  W™  Phillips,  Rott  Long,  &  Eofet  Turner,  for  their  *  Turner,  who 
Deing  released  &  dischardged  from  the  rents  of  wine,  they  paying  the  rate  of  p  butt. 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  42 


330  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  58.      fifty  shillings  p  butt.     Left  W™  Hudson  &  Evan  Thomas,  according  to  theire 
''  desires,  are  to  continew  the  payment  of  theire  seuerall  proportions,  as  in  tjmes 

19  Mav. 

past,  &  thev  to  give  fresh  bond  to  the  Tresiu'er  for  the  performance  thereof, 

LefHudsons      t'       '  J         a  i  ' 

rent  38'i,  Evan  Lef?  Hudsons  proportion  being  thirty  eight  pounds,  &  Evan  Thomas  his  pro- 
Thomas  34".  .         ,  .         -  , 
portion  thu'ty  tower  pounds. 

3unc3,  iGo7.  Memorandum,  that,  vpon  the  day  &  yeare  abouewritten,  Samuell  Sy- 

I'Symon  s      j^ionds,  of  Ipswich,  in  the  sliire  of  Essex,  in  New  England,  gent,  did  take 

land  confirm''.  j  r  '  a  '   o         > 

possession  of  sixe  hundred  &  forty  acres  of  ground  graunted  to  him  by  the 
honnored  Generall  Court,  in  the  presence  &  w"'  the  consent  of  Mohermite, 
sagamore  of  those  parts.  The  place  &  farme  is  now  called  the  Island  Falls ; 
there  is  a  tree  close  by  that  falls,  marked  w"'  two  S  S,  and  a  little  island  in 
the  riuer  by  the  falls  there  douneward,  conteying  in  length  one  full  mile 
from  the  lower  end  of  that  little  island  aforesajd,  vp  the  riuer,  and  halfe  a 
mile  in  breadth  on  each  side  of  the  sajd  riuer,  w'"'^  riuer  is  called  Lamper  Eele 
Riuer.  That  place  or  part  of  Lamper  Ele  Riuer  is  betweene  the  tounes  of 
Doner  and  Exetur,  vp  into  the  countrje,  beyond  the  bounds  of  either  of  those 
tounes  in  that  place,  and  about  sixe  miles  douneward  by  land  to  the  mouth  of 
the  sajd  Lamper  Ele  Riuer,  which  emptjeth  itself  there  into  the  great  bay ; 
and  to  this  wee  give  our  testimony. 

Them^keof  JOHN    i    GAGE, 

DANIELL   EPPS. 

Wee  also  were  present  when  the  land  aboue  mentioned  was  lajd  out  & 
possession  taken. 

EDWARD   HILTON,  Sen, 
EDWARD   HILTON,  Jun. 

This  retourne  being  presented  to  the  Generall  Court  for  their  allowance 
&  confirmation,  by  M"'  Samuell  Symonds,  — 

This  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  allow  &  confirme  this  retourne,  so  as  the 
riuer  herein  menconed  be  &  remajne  in  coinon  as  in  tjmes  past,  &  y*  th'  land 
be  free  from  former  graunts. 

In  ans''  to  M'  Samuell  Symonds  further  request  y'  this  Court  would  ex- 
plajne  theire  proviso  in  theire  graunt  so  as  it  may  not  extend  to  pjudice  his 
right  &  liberty  in  the  sajd  riuer  for  the  convenjency  of  his  mills,  although  in 
all  other  respects  y"  sajd  riuer  be  at  liberty,  the  Court  declares,  in  answer 
thereto,  that  it  is  not  theire  intent  to  prohibitt  the  setting  vp  of  a  mill,  so  as 
the  riuer  be  free  in  other  respects. 
1^    '  In  answer  to  the  petition  of  M''  John  Gilford  on  behalfe  of  M"'  John  Becx 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND  331 

and  Company,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  sajd  Gifford  be  heard  on  the  third  day- 
next,  att  nhie  of  the  clocke  in  the  morning,  and  that  the  secretary  graunt  him 
forthwith  sumons  or  attachments  against  any  person  or  persons,  or  theue  es- 
tates, to  respond  such  comphiiuts  as  the  sajd  John  Gifford  shall  lay  therein 
against  one  or  other.  Attachments  was  graimted  &  issued  out  accordingly,  & 
retournc  made  thereof  in  the  25*  of  May,  the  time  appointed,  when  also  both 
partjes  appeared,  and  attachment  was  read. 

*John  Gifford,  attourney  to  M""  Jn°  Becx  &  Company  of  vndertakers  of      [*277.] 
the  u'on  workes,  plaintifl'e,  ag'  Capt  Thomas  Savage,  defend',  who,  in  his  oune       ^'^  '^^^y- 
name,  and  as  assignee  vnto  Heniy  Webb,  Anthony  Stoddard,  Jacob  Sheafe,  capt.Tho.   ° 
and  seuerall  others,  did  implead  &  prosecute  ag'  the  estate  of  the  said  vnder-  ^•''^'"S''  *"''"  * 

""  judgment. 

takers  of  the  iron  workes  of  Lynne  &  Braintrje,  in  an  action  of  the  case,  to 
value  of  tenn  thousand  pounds,  for  w'l'holding  the  estate  of  the  sajd  John 
Becx  &  Company,  &  for  damages  thereby  susteined  according  to  attachment, 
dated  22"'  day  of  May,  1658.  After  the  attachment  was  read,  together  w"' 
the  letter  of  attourney  &  declaration  of  the  sajd  John  Gifford,  time  was  given 
the  defendant  to  bring  in  his  answ'er,  &  the  plaintiffe  ordered  to  bring  in  also 
what  he  had  further  to  add  to  his  declaration,  &  dcliuer  the  same  into  the 
Court  or  Governor,  that  so  the  defendant  may  haue  an  oppertunitje  to  put  in 
his  full  answer,  that  the  Court  may  not  vnrcasonably  be  deferred  in  this  in  4  mo,  .58. 
season,  &6.  The  plaintiffe  &  defendant  appeared  before  the  Court  25,  6,  7 
of  May,  4  &  8  of  June,  and  after  y"  plaintiffes  letter  of  attourney,  together 
w"'  such  evidences  he  produced,  were  read,  together  w"'  the  evidences  pro- 
duced by  the  defendant,  and  all  considered  of,  the  Court,  taking  notice  that 
the  sajd  Thomas  Savage,  in  his  oune  behalfe,  &  as  assignee  to  Henry  Webb, 
Anthony  Stoddard,  &d,  obtajned  a  judgment  at  a  spcciall  Court  holden  at 
Boston  the  IS""  of  September,  1653,  against  the  estate  of  John  Becx  and 
Company,  by  virtue  whereof  he  was  possessed  of  the  estate  of  the  sajd  John 
Becx  and  Company,  now  sued  for.  The  sajd  John  Gifford  &  Thomas  Savage 
having  produced  all  theire  pleas  and  testimonys,  which  haue  binn  pervsed  and 
considered  of  by  this  Court,  notw^'standing  some  circumstantiall  errors  in  the 
proceedings  at  the  sajd  speciall  Courte,  yett  there  appeareth  not  from  all  that 
hath  beene  alleadged  any  sufficijent  cawse,  according  to  sequitje  and  justice,  to 
reverse  the  sajd  judgment,  and  therefore  graunts  the  defendant  costs,  w'='',  w"> 
the  charge  of  hearing,  is  in  all  twenty  pounds  and  eight  penc. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Hull,  a  day  of  hearing  Courts  answer 
being    appointed.  Cap!   Hubbard   also    appearing,  the   Court,  having    heard  j",^""^  ^''''" 
the  acknowledgments  of  the  partjes  concerned  in  this  petition,  that  the  riucr 
is  the  bounds  of  the  two  tonnes,  doe  determine,  that  neither  of  the  tounes 


25  May. 
Ktis'  to  Boz- 
wortl 
lion. 


532  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1G58.      maj'  improove  both  sides  of  that  riiier  w"'out  the  consent  first  obtajned  each 
from  other. 

In  ans-n-er  to  the  petition  of  Benjamin  Bozworth,  humbly  craving  the  re- 
worths  peti-      mittment  of  his  fine  for  not  warning  the  fifreemen  of  Hull  on  y"*  right  day  to 
give  in  theire  proxies  for  the  nomination  of  persons  for  election,  &d,  the  Coiu-t, 
considering  y'  reasons  in  his  petition,  &  y'  he  is  to  j)ay  tenn  shillings  for 
entry  of  it,  judgeth  meete  to  remitt  his  fine  of  fforty  shillings. 
Koxbury  mens  In  answer  to  the  petition  of  seuerall  inhabitants  of  Eoxbury,  itt  is  or- 

dered, that   the  fines  of  Peeter  Gardiner,  W""  Lincolne,  John  Chandler,  be 
remitted  to  twenty  shillings  a  peece,  and  Tobias  Davis,  the  connstable,  his 
fine  be  remitted  to  forty  shillings. 
Ans'  to  S'«  In  ansAver  to  the  petition  of  Richard  Waite,  one  of  those  y*  were  first 

Con'  300  ac"      ^^^^  '^^^  agaiust  the  Pecquotts,  &  for  seuerall  services,  the  Court  judgeth  it 
graunted.  mccte  to  graunt  him  three  hundred  acres  of  land. 

11:4:58.  In  auswer  to  the  request  of  M''  Symon  Bradstreete,  in  reference  to  his 

ourts  ans'  o    j  ^^^  formerly  graunted  him  by  this  Court  on  this  side  Conecticott  Riuer,  the 

M'  Bradstreets  j    o  j  ' 

request.  Coiut  grauiits  his  request,  i.  e.,  to  haue  the  first  choice  in  the  place  desired, 

provided  it  hinder  not  a  plantation. 
Major  Ather-  In  answ""  to  the  request  of  Majo"'  Humphrey  Atherton,  that  the  graunt 

to  be  laid  out    niade  by  this  Court  3  iii,  1655,  of  five  hundred  acres  of  land,  to  be  lajd  out 

at  Nonotuckc. 
26  :  3  mo,  58. 


at  Nonotucke,  beyond  Springfeild,  the  bill  of  it  by  some  accident  being  lost, 

it  might  by  the  order  &  favor  of  this  Court  be  recorded,  &  lajd  out  to  him  in 

the  place  aboue  mentioned,  according  to  lawe,  the  Court  graunts  his  request. 

[*278.]  *The  Court,  hauing  heard  the  allegations  of  M"'  Edward  Belchar,  laying 

Courts  ans'  to    Qj^^mg  jq   j^gj-g  halfe  an  acre  of  land  by  him  passed  away  to  the  late  Elder 
Belchar.  •'  J  i.  j 

Jacob  Elljot,  as  also  to  two  acres  of  land  which  the  late  Elder  Elljot  purchased 
of  Thomas  Marrett,  attourney  to  Richard  Crainewell,  the  Court,  on  hearing 
of  all  partjes,  sees  no  cause  to  graimt  the  sajd  Belchars  request. 

By  the  Generall  Coiut. 

Arnolds  comis-  Coiiiisslon  &  power  is  hereby  given  to  yow,  AVilljam  Arnold,  Benedict 

Arnold,  Willjam  Carpenter,  Richard  Casmore,  Christopher  Hawkesworth,  & 
Stephen  Arnold,  and  to  all  and  euery  of  yow,  to  ap>hend  the  bodjes  of  John 
Greene,  &  his  sonne  John,  Richard  Waterman,  &  Nicholas  Power,  and  bring 
them  to  Boston  before  the  Governo"',  or  some  other  of  the  Magistrates,  to  be 
proceeded  w""  according  to  justice  ;  and  if  neede  or  occasion  be,  yow  may  take 
ajde  of  any  other  English,  or  of  those  Indians  which  are  vnder  our  jurisdiction, 
and  that  yow  seize  all  such  catle  of  the  sajd  John  Greenes,  which  cannot  now 
be  found,  as  yow  may  heereafter  find,  and  either  send  them  to  vs,  or  keepe 


sion. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  333 

them  safe  till  wee  cann  send  for  tliem  ;  for  all  which  this  shall  be  yo'  sufficyent      1658. 
dischai-ge.     Boston,  the  20"'  of  the  eighth  &,  16-13.  ^~ZT^^ 

^  2b  May, 

p  Curj  INCREASE  NOWELL,  Secret. 

The  comission  aboue  written  being  a  true  copie  of  what  was  presented  by 
the  aboue  named  W"  Arnold,  vnder  the  name  of  M'  Increase  Nowell,  the 
Court,  on  pervsall  thereof,  doe  oune  it  to  be  the  hand  writting  of  the  sajd 
Increase  Nowell,  formerly  secretary  to  the  Generall  Court  of  the  Massachu- 
setts colony,  in  New  England,  as  also  an  act  of  the  Generall  Com-t. 

In   answer  to  the  petition  of  Willjam  Arnold  &  Willjam  Carpenter,  in  Ans'  to  Ar- 

nolds  petition. 

the  behaife  of  themselves  &  all  the  inhabitants  of  Patuxit,  for  a  full  discharge 
from  theire  submission  to  this  jurisdiction,  w">  theire  lands  &  estates  there,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  the  petitioners  request,  so  as  the  sajd  Arnold 
be  ingaged  to  giue  an  account  of  what  he  hath  donne  by  virtue  of  this  Courts 
comission,  and  that  any  of  the  Greenes,  or  other  concerned  thereby,  haue 
liberty  to  prosecute  against  him  in  any  of  our  Courts  for  any  injury  by  them 
pretended  by  him  to  be  donn  to  them,  and  also  giue  securitje  to  the  Court  to 
make  good  what  is  herein  affirmed  by  him. 

The   Court,  vpon   hearing    and  due   consideration   of  the   case  betwixt  Courts  ans'  to 

,  ,  ,         .  , .  Andiver  peti- 

Andouer  &  Billirikey,  judge  meete  to  graunt,  that  the  meadow  in  quaestion,  .^^_ 
lying  vpon  or  neere  Shawshim  Riuer,  &  graunted  by  the  toune  of  Andouer  to 
some  of  theire  inhabitants,  so  it  exceedc  not  iiueteene  acres,  shall  belong  to 
the  toune  of  Andovcr,  the  Ijne  in  other  respects  to  stand  as  it  was  lajd  out  by 
the  coiiiittee. 

In   answer  to   the   petition   of  M"^  Richard  Russell,  it   is   ordered,  that  Ans'  to  M' 

Russells  peti- 

Edmond  Rice  &  Ensigne  Thomas  Nojes  lay  out  the  fiuc  hundred  acres  ot  land  -^^_ 
graunted  to  y'^  5d  Richard  Russell,  May,  57. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  Cap?  James  Johnson  &  Left  Peter  Oliver,  for  Ans'  to  Cap' 

„  ~        ,  Jolu^son*  Lef 

the  abatement  of  the  fines  imposed  by  the  County  Court  on  George  houthen  qu^.^.,  p^^. 
&  Jn°  Els,  theire  servants,  the  Court  judgeth  not  meet  to  abate  any  of  the  ™»- 
fines,  but  referr  it  to  the  County  Court,  to  order  the  servants  to  serve  further 
time,  so  as  to  answer  the  losse  &  chardges  their  masters  haue  binn  put  vnto. 

In  answer  to  the  request  of  Edward  IMichclson,  M"^  Thomas  Danforth  is 
appointed  to  lay  out  vnto  him  the  three  hundred  acres  of  land  formerly 
graunted  vnto  him.  May,  1657. 

*In  answer  to  the  request  of  Stephen  Day,  that  some  meete  person  or      [*279.] 
nersons  might  be  impowred  to  lay  out  three  hundred  acres  of  land  formerly  Cap'  Dennison 

r  o  i^  »>  ,  .      to  lay  out  M^ 

graunted  him  by  this  Court,  it  is   ordered,  that  Capt  George  Dennison  is  y,^-  300  ac. 
heereby  impowred  to  lay  out  the  same. 


334 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1658. 

> , ' 

26  May. 
Capt.  Dennison 
to  lay  out  Edw. 
Rawsons  400 
ac. 

Major  Ather- 
tons  power  to 
appoint  comis- 
sioners  &  judg 
Indian  causes^ 


Way  ag'  Pur- 
chase. 


Mc.adfeilds 
brand  m'lte, 
IVF. 

Capt.  Wal- 
derns  dismis- 
sion. 

Coinittee  to 
lay  out  y"  Gov- 
ern" land. 


Itt  is  fui'ther  ordered,  that  the  sajd  Capt  George  Dennison  lay  out  untc 
Edward  Rawson  fower  hundred  acres,  two  whereof  was  graunted  him  by  this 
Court,  &  the  other  two  hundred  acres  was  graunted  to  Edw  Burt,  w"''  he 
piuchased. 

For  the  better  ordering  and  governiag  the  Indjans  subject  to  vs,  especial- 
ly those  of  Naticke  and  Punquapog,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Majo'  Atherton  doe 
take  care  that  all  such  Indjans  liue  according  to  our  lawes  as  farr  as  they  are 
capable  ;  and  to  that  end  the  sajd  major  is  hereby  autliorlsed  to  constitute 
and  appointe  Indian  coinissioners  in  theire  seuerall  plantations  to  heare  and  de- 
termine all  such  matters  that  doe  arise  amongst  themselves,  as  one  magistrate 
may  doe  amongst  the  English,  w'^''  officers  to  execute  all  comands  and  war- 
rants, as  marshalls  and  counstables  ;  and  further,  that  the  sajd  Majo''  Atherton, 
w'''  the  sajd  comissioners,  shall  haue  the  power  of  a  County  Court  to  heare  & 
determine  all  cawses  arising  amongst  them,  the  sajd  major  appointing  the 
tjme  and  place  of  the  Court,  and  consenting  to  the  determination  or  judgment ; 
and  all  other  matters  beyond  theire  cognizance  shall  be  issued  and  determined 
by  the  Court  of  Asistants. 

In  the  case  of  Eliazer  Way,  plaintifFe,  against  M''  Thomas  Purchase,  de- 
fendant, w''''  was  trjed  at  a  County  Court  held  at  Boston,  October,  1657,  the 
jury  bringing  in  a  verdict  w"^*"  the  bench  refused,  came  to  this  Court  of  course. 
The  attachment  and  seuerall  evidences  being  read,  this  Court,  not  being  sattis- 
fied  that  M""  Purchase  plantation  sued  for  is  in  this  jurisdiction,  judge  it  not 
meet  to  make  any  proceeding  in  the  case,  and  order,  on  request  of  the  sajd 
Eliazer  Way,  that  all  his  originall  papers  on  file  in  the  County  Court  be  by  the 
secretary  deliuered  vnto  him  againe. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  marke,  or  letter,  in  the  margent  be  the  brand 
marke  for  Meadfeild. 

Cap^  Waldern,  on  his  request,  is  tlismist  from  further  attending  the  ser- 
vice of  this  Coiu't. 

The  Court  being  informd  that  the  Governo''^  ilnes  the  last  ycare  hath 
hindered  the  prosecution  of  the  order  by  this  Court,  made  May,  1657,  fibr  JNI' 
Thomas  Danforth  and  Robert  Hale  to  lay  out  the  Gouerno"^^  fformer  graunts 
of  lands  on  Ipswich  Riuer,  is  therefore,  on  his  request,  againe  renewed,  and 
they  alike  impowred  to  lay  out  the  sajd  graunts,  so  it  be  done  in  one  yeare 
more  only. 


Left.  Prentice  Lajd  out  in  the  Pequod  conntrje  vnto  Left  Thomas  Prentice,  by  virtue 

land  lajd  out.    ^^  ^  graunt  by  him  purchased  of  Stephen  Day,  three  hundred  acres  of  land, 

being  bounded  w""  the  Sound  on  the  south,  and  w"'  Capt  Gookins  land  on 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  335 

the  west,  and    the    colledg   land  north  east,  and   the  wildernes  land  north      1658. 
west.     The  Court  allowes  of  this  retourne,  and  confirmes  the  land  herein    "~     ">    "* 

26  May. 

mentioned  to  y*  sajd  Left  Tho  Prentice  &  his  heires. 

GEORG  DENNISON. 

Laid  out  to  M"'  Edward  Eawson  three  hundred  &  fifty  acres  of  land,  Edw.Rawsona 

1        T>  •  *""  ""^r^s  lajd 

being  bounded  w"^  Cap?  Gookins  land  on  y"  east,  Pauquatucke  Kiuer  to-  g^^_ 
wards  the  south,  land  lajd  out  to  M'  John  Mellows  towards  the  west,  and 
the  wildernes  toward  the  north  ;  the  w"^  Ijne  betwixt  M"'  Mellows  and  M' 
Rawson  is  to  beginn  at  Pauquatuck  Riuer,  a  mile  and  a  halfe  fi-om  Thomas 
Stauntons  house,  vp  the  riuer,  &  from  there  to  be  contjnued  on  an  east  Ijne  ; 
also,  fiffty  acres  of  meadow  of  the  south  end  of  the  meadow  that  lyeth  on  y® 
east  side  of  Pauquatucke  Eiuer,  y'=  w*  meadow  is  comonly  called  Omeconset. 

GEORGE   DENNISON. 

The  Court  allows  &  confiermes  y'  land  mentioned  in  this  retourne  to 
y'  sd  Edward  Rawson  &  his  heires. 

*In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  North  Hampton,  it  is  ordered,  that  theire  con-      [*280.] 
dition  in  relation  to  a  minister  be  forthwith  coiSended  to  the  reuerend  elders.  Courts  ans'  to 

North  Hamp" 

&  theire  help  desii-ed  therein ;  secondly,  that  there  shall  be  two  Coiurts  kept  peticon,  &c. 
yearely  by  the  coinissioners  of  Springfeild  &  North  Hampton  joinctly,  or  by 
any  fower  of  them,  the  one  at  Springfeild  on  the  last  Twesday  in  the  first 
nioneth,  and  the  other  at  North  Hampton  vpon  the  last  Twesday  in  Sep- 
tember, which  Courts  shall  haue  power  to  heare  and  determine,  by  jury  or 
w^'out,  according  to  the  liberty  the  lawe  allowes  in  County  Courts,  all  civill 
actions  not  exceeding  twenty  pounds  damage,  and  all  criminall  cases  not  ex- 
ceeding five  poimds  fine,  or  corporall  punishment  not  exceeding  tenn  stripes, 
reserving  appeales  in  all  such  cases  to  the  County  Court  at  Boston  ;  and  the  sajd 
Court  shall  haue  power  to  graunt  Ijcences  for  the  keeping  of  ordinarjes,  or 
houses  of  comon  entertajnment,  selling  wine,  cidar,  or  strong  licquors,  accord- 
ing to  lawe,  &  not  otherwise,  giving  the  oath  of  &eedora  or  fidellitje  to  persons 
qualified,  according  to  lawe,  to  binde  to  the  peace  or  good  behaviour,  to  comitt 
to  pi-ison  fellons  &  malefactors,  as  the  lawe  allowes,  &  this  to  be  during  the 
Courts  pleasiu'e. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  seueraU  inhabitants  of  Ipswich,  the  Court  Courts  ans' to 

1  Ti  t>  Ipswich  peti- 

declares,  y'  the  freemen  w^'in  theire  seuerall  tounes  haue  liberty  &  power,  ac-  gon. 
cording  to  the  last  lawe  or  order,  title  Touneships,  to  make  chojce  of  such 
inhabitants  that  haue  taken  the  oath  of  fidellitje  to  be  jurymen,  and  to  haue 
theire  votes  in  the  chojce  of  selectmen,  and  where  no  select  men  are,  to  haue 


336 


THE    KECORDS    OP    THE    COLONY    OF 


1658. 

26  May. 

Repealing  y«  2 
lawes,  title 
Touneships. 


Ans'  to  Sam. 
Greenes  peti- 
tion. 


Ans'  to  Nicco. 
Nortons  peti- 
con. 


[*281.] 

M'  Tinckers 
coinission  to 
marry. 

300  ac"  of  land 
gr'""  to  M' 
Colebron. 


theire  votes  in  orclering  of  schooles,  hearding  of  catle,  laying  out  highwayes, 
&  distributing  of  lands,  &d,  ■which  necessarily  implys  the  sajd  freemen  haue 
power,  by  virtue  of  the  sajd  lawe,  to  restrajne  some  vpou  just  cause. 

For  explanation  &  emendation  of  two  lawes  in  the  printed  bookc,  title 
Tounships,  relating  to  the  liberty  of  such  as  haue  taken  the  oath  of  fidellity 
to  vote  in  toune  affaires,  w'^''  seemes  not  well  to  consist  together,  the  latter 
also  repealing  the  former,  &  finding  inconvenienc  in  the  execution  of  that, 
haue  therefore  ordered,  &  be  it  heereby  ordered  &  inacted,  that  for  time  to 
come  all  Englishmen  that  are  setled  inhabitants  &  house  holders  in  any  toune 
of  the  age  of  twenty  fewer  yeares,  &  of  honest  &  good  conuersation,  being 
rated  at  twenty  pounds  estate  in  a  single  countrje  rate,  that  hath  taken  the 
oath  of  fidellitje  to  this  government,  &  no  other,  except  ffreemen,  maybe 
chosen  jury  men  or  connstables,  and  haue  theire  vote  in  the  chojce  of  the 
selectmen  for  the  toune  affaires,  assessments  of  rates,  &  other  prudentialls 
propper  to  the  select  men  of  the  seuerall  tounes,  provided  still  that  the  majo"" 
part  of  all  companjes  of  select  men  be  freemen  from  tjme  to  tjme  that  shall 
make  a  valjd  act,  as  also  where  no  selectmen  are  to  haue  theire  vote  in  order- 
ing of  schooles,  hearding  of  catle,  laying  out  of  highways,  &  distributing  of 
lands,  any  lawe,  vse,  or  custome  to  the  contrary  notw*''standing,  &  the  former 
lawes,  so  farre  as  they  relate  to  the  liberty  of  such  as  are  non  ffreemen,  are 
hereby  repealed. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Samuel  Greene,  printer  at  Cambridge,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  coinend  the  consideration  thereof  to  the  coiiiis- 
sioners  of  the  Vnited  Colonjes  at  theire  nexte  meeting,  that  so,  if  they  see 
meete,  they  may  write  to  the  corporation  in  England  for  the  procuring  of 
twenty  pounds  worth  of  letters  for  the  vse  of  the  Indian  Colledg. 

In  ans''  to  y'  peticon  of  Nicholas  Norton,  humbly  desu'ing  the  remitt- 
ment  of  the  forfeiture  of  his  bond  for  not  bringing  his  servant  to  y"  last 
Courte  of  Asistants,  to  ans''  w'  was  to  be  lajd  to  his  charge,  which  was  occa- 
sioned through  his  ignorance  of  the  time  of  the  Coiuts  sitting,  the  Court 
judeth  it  meete  to  graunt  his  request,  provided  he  bring  in  his  servant  when 
he  shall  be  called  therevnto. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  John  Tincker  shall  &  is  heereby  impowred  to 
marry  George  Bennett  &  Ljddia  Kibby,  &  ^  ,  who  are  published  accord- 
ing to  lawe. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  M'  Willjam  Colebron,  the  Court  judgeth  it 
meete  to  graunt  him  three  hundred  acres  of  land  where  he  can  fiude  it,  &  is 
in  refferenc  to  twenty  five  pounds  by  him  formerly  paid  into  y**  coinon  stock, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  337 

to  be  layd  out  vnto  him  by  Left  Fisher  and  Sarjant  Jn"  BarreU,  &  make  retourne      1658. 

thereof  to  this  Courte.  2g  May. 

In  the  case  of  Jn"  Tucker,  and  Anne,  his  wife,  plaintiiFe,  ag'  Jn°  Ottis  &  courts  judg- 
Jn"  Tklansfeild,  defendant,  the  Court,  on  hearing  of  all  the  evidences  produced  l^^^'^'"'^'" 
in   the   case,  they  found  for   the   defendant  costs   of  Court,  i.  e.,  one  pound 
nineteene  shillings  &  fower  pence. 

In  aiis'^  to  the  petition  of  Dorothy  Vpshall,  humbly  craving  the  remitt-  Ans'  to  Doro- 

--..,,       -j^     ,,,     thy  Vpshalls 

ment  of  the  remajnder  of  the  fine  imposed  on  hir  husband,  JNicholas  Vpshall,  petition, 
not  yett  taken,  that  so  the  innocent  may  not  suffer  w"-  the   nocent,  &5,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  meete   to  remitt  the  remajnder  of  the  fine  not  yett  taken, 
and  setles  it  wholy  on  the  sajd  Dorothy  &  for  hir  advantage,  so  as  hir  husband 
shall  haue  no  power  to  dispose  of  it  from  hir,  or  to  any  other  vse. 

In  the   case    of   John  Johnson,  plaintiffe,  &  John  Viol,  defendant,  the  Courts  judg- 

.  ment  in  John- 

Court,  having  heard  the  evidences  in  the  case,  as  a  finall  issue  thereto,  finde  ^^^  &  yioig 
for  the  defendant  costs  of  Coiu-t. 

In  ans--  to  the  petition  of  Samuell  Cole,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  Courts  ans'  to 
graunt  the  peticoner  the  necke  of  land  desired,  Ipng  w'^in  a  mile  &  a  half  or  p^tiuon. 
two  miles  of  Nacooke,  beyond  the  toune  of  Chemsford ;  &  what  is  wanting 
there  to  make  vp  the  fower  hundred  acres  formerly  graunted  him,  he  hath 
liberty  to  take  vp  in  any  other  place  where  he  cann  finde  it,  according  to  lawe. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Majo'"  Generall  Daniell  Dcnnison  dilligently  pervse.  Major  gen.  to 

,  .  ,.,  p'Tse  the  laws. 

examine,  and  weigh  euery  lawe,  &  compare  them  w""  others  ot  hke  nature, 
&  such  as  are  cleare,  plajne,  &  good,  free  from  any  just  exception,  to  stand 
w'l'out  any  animadversion,  as  approoved ;  such  as  are  repealed,  or  fitt  to  be 
repealed,  to  be  so  marked,  &  the  reasons  given ;  such  as  are  obscure,  contra- 
dictory, or  seeming  so,  to  be  rectified,  and  the  emendations  prepared ;  where 
there  is  two  or  more  lawes  about  one  &  the  same  thing,  to  prepare  a  draught 
of  one  lawe  that  may  com^hend  the  same,  to  make  a  plajne  &  easy  table,  & 
to  prepare  what  els  may  present  in  the  pervsing  of  them  to  be  necessary  and 
vsefuU,  &  make  retoume  to  tte  next  sessions  of  this  Court. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  Majo-^  Symon  Willard,  the  Court  judgeth  it  Courts  graunt 
meete  to  graunt  his  request,  viz.,  a  farme  of  five  hundred  acres  on  the  south  ^jon  Millard, 
side  of  the  riuer  that  runneth  from  Nashaway  to  Merremacke,  betweene  Lan- 
caster &  Groten,  &  is  in  sattisfaction  of  a  debt  of  forty  fower  pounds  Jn"  Saga- 
more, of  Patuckett,  doth  owe  to  him,  provided  he  make  ouer  all  his  right,  title, 
&  interest  in  the  execution  obtayned  agt  the  sajd  Sagamore  to  the  coimtrje. 
-yych  yfus  donne. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  M"  Martha  Coggan,  the  Court,  remembring  ^;:'J^gg°;V° 
that  much  time  was  spent  in  hearing  the  case  mentioned  in  this  petition,  &  petition. 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  43 


338  THE  RECOEDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

after  due  consideration  of  what  could  be  alleadged  therein,  came  at  last  to  a 
determination   therevpon,  from  v,-"^^  they  cannot  see  any  reason  to  recede,  & 
therefore  declare  the  petitioner  should  rest  sattisfied  therein. 
M'Winthrops  In  ans''  to  the  peticons  of  M''  Deane  Winthrop  &  John  Mellows,  hum- 

&  Jn«  Mellows    ,1,..,,. 

1200  ac's  to       "ly  desiring  that  theire  seuerali  graunts  of  land  of  one  thousand  &  two  hun- 

e  aj   ou .       (Jred  acres  formerly  graunted  them  be  lajd  out  by  some  meete  persons,  the 

Court  doth  order,  that  Capt  George  Dennison  &  M'  Thomas  Danforth  to  lay 

out  the  land  heerein  mentioned  where  they  cann  finde  it,  according  to  theire 

respective  former  graunts. 

[*282.]  *Whereas  information  hath  beene  given  to  this  Court  that  seuerali  of  the 

Courts  declara-  gouldiers  at  Portsmouth  doe   aphend   themselves   not  vnder  the   comand  of 

tion  referring 

to  Portsmouth  theire  coinander  according  to  the  lawes  of  this  jurisdiction,  but  accompt  them- 

souldjers,  &c.         ,  ,..  .  ,  ,  ,  i  •      /-i  i  •    i 

selves  at  liberty  so  as  to  trajne  when  they  please,  this  Court  thinks  meete  to 
declare,  that  the  souldjers  of  the  toune  aforesajd,  and  all  others  lying  w"'in 
the  extent  of  our  lyne,  are  subject  to  the  same  way  and  order  of  discipline 
w*"*  ourselves,  &  ought  to  attend  theire  oune  coiiianders  therein,  and  in  case 
of  any  remissnes  therein,  to  be  Ijable  to  the  same  fines  as  oui'selves,  in  the  lawe 
expressed. 
Cofiissioners  Whereas  some  complaints  haue  beene  brought  into  this  Court,  by  the  in- 

power  o  a  e    i^j^jj^fj^^fg  ^f  (-j^g  ^^jjg  gj^jg  ^f  (-j-jg  Riugi-  of  Piscatao,,  of  diuers  disorders  &  in- 

my'remajnuer  ^' 

of  y  easterne     coiiveiiieiicjes  w'^'^  doe  dayly  arise  for  want  of  goverment  being  orderly  setled 
parts,  &  keepe 

Courts,  &c.  to  the  furthest  extent  of  our  Ijne  in  the  easterne  parts,  itt  is  therefore  ordered 
by  the  authority  of  this  Courte,  that  M''  Samuell  Symonds  &  Cap?  Thomas 
Wiggins,  being  joyned  w""  the  County  Court  of  Yorke,  or  any  three  of 
them,  shall  haue  comission  graunted  vnto  them,  &  as  full  power  thereby  given 
them  to  take  the  residew  of  the  inhabitants  residing  w*in  our  Ijne  as  hath  binn 
graunted  to  former  coiuissioners  in  the  like  cases,  to  which  purpose  the  coinission- 
ers  aforesajd  are  to  repau-e  to  Blacke  Point,  Richmonds  Island,  &  Casco,  or  some 
such  one  place  w"^in  the  county  of  Yorke  as  they  shall  judge  meete,  there  to  take 
in  the  inhabitants  thereof  into  our  jurisdiction.  And  whereas  further  comjjlaint 
haue  binn  exhibbited  to  this  Court  of  inconveniencjes  w"^""  doe  coiiionly  arise  in 
Saco  &  some  other  places  in  the  county  of  Yorke,  through  the  weakenes  of  theire 
toune  coiiiissioners,  for  want  of  some  person  or  persons  to  joyne  w*  them  in 
coinission  for  the  better  mannagement  of  those  affaires,  it  is  therefore  ordered, 
that  the  aforesajd  coiuissioners  shall  haue  full  power  as  they  judge  meete  to 
confirme  such  a  person  or  persons  as  the  sajd  toune  or  tonnes  shall  present, 
to  be  asistant  to  the  sajd  toune  coiiiissioners,  from  tjmc  to  tjme,  in  theire 
judicijall  affaires. 

In  answer  to  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Meadford,  itt  is  ordered. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW  ENGLAND.  339 

that  all  matters  of  a  civill  nature  arising  w"'in  theire  peculiar  ^ ,  propper  to  y«      1658. 

cognizance  of  three  coiiiissioners  for  ending  smale  cases,  be  heard  &  determined    "~     >     ~' 

by  the  coiuissioners  of  Cambridge.  ,,    ,„    , 

•'  ^  Meiiaforu  cases 

In  answer  to  the  peticou  of  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  the  Court  judgeth  it  Wabie^by  Cam 

br:  coniission- 

meete   to  graunt  him  three  hundred  acres  of  land  where  he  cann  finde  it,  ers. 
according  to  lawe.  ^"""^^  ="i^'  & 

graunt  to  Cap* 

In  ans''  to  the  rec[uest  of  Cap?  Thomas  Clarke,  the  Court  doth  order  &  Edw.  Johnson 
appointe  Richard  Fellowes  &  some  other  meete  person  to  lay  the  three  hun-    ''^'  'f^''^^'"' 

^  ^  X  ./  acres  of  land  to 

dred  acres  of  land  formerly  grauntod  him  by  this  Court,  so  it  prejudice  no  be  lajd  out. 
former  graunts. 

Itt  is  ordered,  on  request  of  the   inhabitants  of  Water  Toune,  that  Cap?  Cap'  Hugh 
Hugh  Mason  shall  &  hereby  is  impowred  to  solemnize  marriages  at  Water 


emniz  mar- 


Toune,  for  preventing  of  travajl  &  other  inconveniencjes.  "'"^s^s  at  Wa- 

*Wee,  whose  names  are  vnder  written,  in  obedjence  to  the  order  of  the  [*283.] 
honno''^  Generall  Court,  haue  lajd  out  to  John  Stone,  of  Sudbury,  ffiffty  acres  stones  50  acrea 
of  vpland,  joyning  to  Sudbury  Riuer  at  the  falls  of  the  sajd  riuer,  twenty 
acres  of  the  sajd  ffiffty  being  southward,  joyning  to  the  lands  of  John  Stone, 
which  sajd  lands  were  purchased  by  John  Stone  of  the  Indians,  &  after  con- 
firmed by  the  honored  Generall  ^;  also  the  other  thirty  acres  of  the  sajd 
fifty,  lying  northward  of  the  afore  sajd  land,  purchased  of  the  Indjans,  & 

joyning  to  y'  sajd  lands. 

EDMOND   RICE, 

THOMAS   NOJCE. 

The  Court  approoves  of  this  retoume,  if  not  found  formerly  graunted. 

In  ans"^  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Misticke,  the  Court,  consid-  Courts  ans'  to 
ering  there  hath  been  no  ans'  retourned  from  the  Generall  Court  of  Conecti-  of  Mis'tickT  ^ 
cott  to  theire  letter,  directed  to  them,  which  gives  the  Court  cause  to  imagine 
they  are  not  resolved  to  give  vp  theire  clayme  to  those  lands,  so  that  the 
matter  is  likely  to  come  to  be  judged  by  the  coiiiissioners,  judg  meete  to  for- 
beare  further  actings  therein  till  the  meeting  of  the  coiiiissioners,  and  doe 
expect  &  require  the  inhabitants  to  carrye  themselves  &  order  theire  affaires 
peaceably  &  by  coiiion  agreement  in  the  meane  while,  and  till  other  provis- 
sion  be  made  in  theire  behalfe ;  and  further  desire  our  coiuissioners  to  be  mind- 
full  of  this  buisnes,  &  endeavo""  an  issue  thereof  at  the  next  meeting. 

In  ans""  to  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  BilHrrikey,  the  letter  in  the  Billirikeys 
margent  is  appointed  to  be  theire  brandmarke.  ^"°     "  *' 

In  ans'  to  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Meadford,  the  Court  judgeth 


340  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1658.      it  meete  to  grauut  tlieire  desire,  i.  e.,  liberty  to  lyst  themselves  in  the  trayne 
""■^    '       ^    band    of    Cambridg,    &    be    no    longer    compelled    to   travajle    vnto    Charls 

26  May. 
Mcadfoid  soul-  Toune. 

djcrs  vnder  jj^  ^^^^r  (-q  (-}^g  peticon  of  Nathaniell  Masterson,  humbly  desiring  the  re- 

Cabridgband.  -^  _  '  ^  o 

Ans'  tu  Mars-    mittment  of  the  fine  of  fine  pounds  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court  at 
tcrsons  peti-      jps-ftrich,  for  selling  beere,  &(3,  \v"»out  a  Ijcence,  the  Court  judgeth  it  mecte  to 

abate  him  fiuety  shillings  of  the  sajd  ffine. 
Ans'  to  Martin  In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Martyn  Stebbins,  humbly  craving  by  the  favor 

Jon  of  this  Court  to  be  restored  to  his  former  liberty  to  keepe  an  house  of  enter- 

taynement,  &d,  the  Court  graunts  his  request,  provided  he  haue  the  consent  of 

the  select  men  of  Boston  &  the  approbation  of  the  County  Court. 
Buttons  aha.'-  In  ans''  to  the  request  of  M''  John  Johnson  in  behalfe  of  Richard  Sutton, 

™  "      ■  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  abate  the  sajd  Sutton  twenty  shillings  of  y^  fine 

imposed  on  him  by  y"  County  Court. 

Cap>  Gookins  Layd  out  according  to  order  of  the  honnored  Generall  Court  of  the  Matta- 

o„t_  chusett,  vnto  Capt  Daniell  Gookin,  in  the  Pequot  countrje,  five  hundred  acres 

of  land,  being  bounded  on  the  west  w"'  Poquatucke  Riuer,  on  y'  south  w""  the 
Sound,  on  the  east  w'^  Thomas  Prentice,  &  on  the  north  w"'  the  wildernes. 

GEORGE   DENNISON. 
The  Court  approoves  of  this  retourne. 

Courts  aas' to  In  aus'  to  the  petic(5n  of  Edward  Colcord,  humbly  craving  the  favor 

w.    0  cor  .   ^|.  ^j^.^  Court  to  appoint  &  impower  a  coiiilttee  to  heare  the  case  formerly  heard 

in  this  Court  betweene  M""  Thomas  Rucke  &  Jaines  Wall,  relating  to  a  saw 

mill  standing  on  Exeter  River,  w'''  y^  sajd  Colcord  bought  of  y"'  sajd  Wall,  & 

on  condition  had  by  the  sajd  Wall,  for  want   of  due  evidence,  w*  the  sajd 

Colcord  cann  pduce,  &  the  id  Rucke  was  ignorant  of,  the  Court  judgeth  it 

meete  to  grauut  the  peticon,  and  that  Capt  Brjan  Pendleton,  M'  Vai  Hill, 

Left  Rotit  Pike,  «&  M"  Tho  Bradbury,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  &  hereby 

are  impowred  to  heare  the  case  &  to  examine  wittnesses  vpon  oath,  &  to  make 

retourne  of  what  they  find  in  or  about  the  id  case  to  the  next  sessions  of  y' 

Court,  to  be  fully  concluded  on. 

[*284.]  *Whereas  the  tonnes  of  Yorke  &  Wells  were,  by  coinissioners  from  the 

Comittec  to      Generall  Court,  appointed  to  lay  out  the  bound  of  each  toune  betwixt  them- 

lay  out  Yorke 

&  Wells  selves,  which  hitherto  haue  not  beene  donne  by  reason  of  some  differences 

boun  3,    c.      jijgj-giii  betweene  the  toune  aforesajd,  for  the  preventiug  of  future  inconven- 

jencjes  in  this  respect,  it  is  therefore  ordered,  that  Capt  Brjan  Pendleton,  Cap! 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  341 


26  JIay. 


Nicholas  Sliaplcigli,  &  Nico  Frost  are  &  shall  be  hereby  impowrcd  to  pitch  &      1  (55  8. 
lay  out  the  dividing  Ijne  betweeue  Yorke  &  Wells,  from  that  marked  tree  at 
■which  formerly  by  mutuall  consent  of  those  two  toimcs  there  bounds  west  sett, 
and  to  make  a  true  retourne  thereof,  vnder  theire  hands,  unto  the  next  sessions 
of  this  Court. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticou  of  Capt  Brjan  Pendleton,  the  Court,  in  referenc  to  Courts  graunt 
his  service  pformed  w""  other  gent"  in  taking  in  the  easterne  parts,  &d,  the  q',  p'endie- 
Court  doth  graunt  him  two  hundred  acres  of  land  on  Chocheca  Riuer,  aboue  *"''• 
Doner  bounds,  as  neere  to  the  land  lajd  out  to  M''  Edward  Eawson  as  maybe, 
to  be  lajd  out  by  M"'  Edw  Starbuck  &  Peter  Coffyn. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  some  of  the  inhabitants  of  Ljnne  &  Reading  &  Linn, Redding, 
Rumly  Marsh,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  them  liberty  to  rajse  a  jj,j,)j  liberty  to 
troope  of  horse,  &  choose  theire  officers,  provided  they  be  not  fferry  free,  nor  "'"'^^  ^  troope, 
haue  fine  shillings  yeerly  allowed  them  from  the  ^country,  as  other  troop''s 
haue. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Rofet  Tucke,  humbly  desiring  the  remittment  Rob'  Tucks 
of  the  fine  of  fine  pounds  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court  for  selling    "^  " ,     "^J 
beere  w'^'out  a  licence,  &6,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  that  three  pounds  of 
his  sajd  fine  be  remitted  to  him. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Newbury,  &5,  humbly  craving  Ans'  to  sea° 
that  the  might  haue  the  bennefitt  of  the  law  that  no  man  should  haue  coiiiand  peticon. 
of  the  horse  &  flfoote  both,  that  Cap?  Gerrish  maybe  required  to  desert  the 
horse  &  wholly  attend  the  ffoote,  or  attend  the  horse  &  medle  no  more  yr^^ 
the  flfoote,  that  so  they  maybe  excef  by  him,  vj)ou  whom  they  must  depend  in 
tjme  of  neede,  i.  e.,  theire  lef'un'  allowed  &  approoued  of  by  Court,  the  Court 
judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  theire  request. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  other  inhabitants  of  Newbury,  inform-  Courts  ans'  to 
iug  of  disorders,  &S,  in  y*  last  peticon  of  theire  neighbo's,  the  Court  judgeth  j^^^y^  ^^^^ 
it  meete  to  declare  that  the  execution  of  what  is  passed  in  referenc  to  y"  former  *'^'  ve't^eon. 
petition  be  suspended,  and  the  case  to  be  in  statu  quo ;  &  it  is  ordered,  y'  the 
secretary  issue  out  his  warrant  ag'  the  next  Gennerall  Court  to  Jn°  Emery,  Jn° 
Webster,  &  such  others  as  are  named  in  the  papers  brought  into  the  Court,  to 
appcare  before  the  Generall  Court  in  October  next,  to  answer  w'  is  lajd  ag' 
them    for  theire  abusiue  carriages  in  that   petition,  &   y'  Heir    Short,    Rich 
Kent,  Rich  Knight,  Nico  Nojes,  &  Anthony  Somersby  then  also  appcare,  & 
make  good  w'  they  chardge  ag'  the  other  persons. 

In  answer  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  new  tounc  at  Salisburv,     ""'i.'i"?^^'' 

^  ./  J   yc  inhalntauts 

humbly  desiring  that  they  might  be  a  distinct  toune  of  themselves,  &  make  °''  '^c  new 

toune  at  Salis- 

provision  for  y'  maintenance  of  y'  worshipp  of  God  amongst  them,  after  the  bury,  &c. 


342  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

Court  had  heard  what  the  inhabitants  of  both  okl  toune  &  new  of  SaHsbuiy, 
by  theire  deputy  &  attorneys,  could  say,  the  Court  judged  it  not  meete  to 
graunt  y*  inhabitants  of  the  new  tonne  of  Salisbury  theire  petition,  but  doe 
declare  &  order  flbr  the  present,  that  they  shall  attend  the  worship  of  God  to- 
gether in  the  old  toune,  &  that  they  contribute  theire  seuerall  proportions  for 
the  majntenance  &  continuance  of  the  same  amongst  them. 
[*285.]  *In  answer  to  the  petition  of  George  Badcocke,  humbly  desiring  the  re- 

Badcocks  18      niittment  of  the  eighteene  pounds  fine  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court  for 
6".  selling  strong  waters  to  y'  Indians,  w"''  he  afEi-med  was  donne  by  his  wife  w'''- 

out  his  consent,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  abate  him  twelve  pounds  of  the 
sajd  ffine. 
Thayers  fine  of  There  being  a  petition  pferd  by  Richard  Thayer  to  the  last  Gen'  Court 

gu_  in  October  for  y*  abatement  of  a  fine  of  nineteene  pounds  imposed  on  him  by 

y"^  County  Court  of  Boston  for  selling  strong  licquors  contrary  to  lawe,  w'"^  was 
then  abated  to  fine  pounds,  now,  forasmuch  as  by  accident  the  sajd  petition  was 
lost,  and  so  no  entry  of  the  Court  order  therevpon,  it  is  therefore  ordered, 
that  the  sajd  act  of  the  Generall  Court  is  hereby  confirmed  &  made  good  in 
all  respects  as  before. 
Courts  ans' to  In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Rhoda  Goai'e,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to 

Rhoda  Goares  .  .     ,.  ... 

peticon.  graunt  liir  liberty  to  take  vp  one  hundred  eighty  eight  acres  of  land,  being  hir 

proportion  in  y«  ffower  thousand  acres  formerly  graunted  to  Roxbury,  in  any 

place  in  this  jurisdiction  that  is  not  already  graunted,  nor  where  it  may  be 

prejudicijall  to  a  plantation,  &  Capt  Lusher  &  Left  Fisher  is  appointed  to  lay 

it  out. 

Courts  ans'  to  In  ans''  to  a  request  of  Sarjant  Hoyte  &  Sarj'  Stephens,  that  Phillip  Chal- 

ticon  referine    ^'^^  might   be   Confirmed  left  to  y''  ffbote  company  in  Salisbmy,  the  Court 

to  Phillip         judgeth  it  meet  to  referr  the  determination  thereof  to  y*  next  County  Court  of 

Chalice.  • 

that  county, 
sofluofshott  On  the  motion  of  Capt  Breedon  in  behalfe  of  Colonel  Tho  Temple,  it  is 

neil  Temple,     ordered,  y'  y*  surveyor  generall  deliuer  to  the  sd  Colonell  Thomas  Temple,  or 

his  order,  three  hundred  weight  of  minion  shott,  w''''  the  Court  lends  to  him 

on  his  promise  to  repay  y*  same  in  like  good  shott. 
Cap'  Hubbard  Cajjt  Joshua  Hubbard,  on  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Hingham,  is  ap- 

marriaoe  at       pointed  to  solemnize  marriages  betweene  psons  legally  published,  &d,  in  that 

Hingham.  tOUne. 

Ans'  to  Cap'  In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Capt  Richard  Davenport,  it  is  ordered,  that 

auenpoits       j^q^  Joshua  Fisher,  John   Prescott,  &  Jonas   Fairebancks   shall  &  hereby  is 

petio.  '  '  •' 

appointed  to  lay  out  sixe  hundred  &  ffiuety  acres  of  laud  to  him,  formerly  & 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS   BAY   IN   NEW   ENGLAND.  343 

y'=  last  yeere  grauntcd,  where  it  shallbe  free  of  other  graunts,  &  make  retourne      10  5  8. 
to  y"  next  sessions  of  this  Court.  '' 

.  .  26  May. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Cleoment  Grosse,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  dement 
restore  him  to  his  former  liberty  to  keepe  an  howse  of  entertainment,  accord-  "Crosse  sett  at 

•^  •'  liberty,  &c. 

ing  to  lawe. 

In   tlie   case   betweene  Joseph  Armitage  &  Thomas  Willjams,  after   the  Courts  judg- 
Courts  hearing  &  pervsing  the  evidences  produced  in  the  case,  tlie  Court  finds  ^^„^  g.  -^v-m. 
for  the  defendant,  Tho  Willjams,  twenty  shillings  costs  &  damage.  ''^^®" 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  John  Dickison,  late  connstable  of  Salisbury,  the  Courts  ans'  to 

/-,  11  1  •■  1  T  1  -ii'o  •        Dickisons 

Court  declares,  the  petitioner  acted  according  to  lawe  in  collecting  &  appris-  petijon. 
ing  the  country  rate,  and  therefore  judge  meete,  if  any  damage  be,  it  should  be 
borne  by  the  country. 

In  ails'"  to  the  peticon  of  Cap?  Richard  Davenport,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  Ans'  to  Cup« 
Tresnrer  pay  him  eighteene  pounds  seven  shillings,  w'='>  he  hath  disbursed  for  ppyjo^ 
the  country  for  boats,  coulo''^  &d,  and  the  Governo'',  Dept  Governo'',  &  ^Majo""  Govern' &Dcp> 
Atherton  are  hereby  impowred  to   give   coiriission  &  direction  to  Cap?  Rich  g^ 
Dauenport,  &  to  signe  bills  to  y'^  Tresurer  for  the  payment  of  such  imple- 
ments as  from  tjme  to  tjme  shall  be  necessary  for  the  place. 

In   the    case    betwene  Jn°  WincoU  &  Lewis  Jones,  the  Court,  hauing  Court  judg- 
heard  the  evidences  on  both  sides,  doe  order,  as  a  finall  issue  thereof,  that  the  ^.^y^  g.  j^^^^ 
sajd  Lewis  Jones  pay  viito  the  sajd  Jn°  Wincoll  three  pounds.  ''''^''• 

*The  Court  retourned  an  ans'  to  his  highnes  letter,  w"^''  they  rec''  in  May,      [*286.] 
1658,  w"^""  letter  or  answer  is  in  the  Courts  booke  of  letters.  Courts  letter  to 

his  highnes. 

Whereas  the  toune  of  Saco  (w^'in  the  lyne  of  our  pattent,  in  or  neere  proclamation 

&  order  ag*J 
Bonighton. 


the  bounds  whereof  John  Bonighton  Ijveth)  haue  generally  submitted  them-    '  °^  "  "°'  "° 

selves  &  theire  lands  to  the  government  &  jurisdiction  of  the  ]\Iassachusetts, 

and  whereas  there  are  great  and  frequent  complajnts  made  to  this  Court  by 

seuerall  credible  persons  that  the  sajd  Bonighton,  attending  no  gouernment, 

doth  molest  both  his  neighbo"  &  other  that  occasionally  trafficque  or  ffish  in 

those  parts,  &  by  his  outragious  carriages  hath  majmed  some  and  put  others 

in  dainger  of  theire  Hues,  by  his  lawless  and  imperious  actions,  and  whereas 

legall   courses  haue  binn  taken,  &  much  patience  haue  binn  vsed  for  his 

reducement   into    some   tollerable   demeano''   hitherto,  not   only  in  vajnc,  but 

insteed  of  compljance,  he  hath  sent  contemptuous  &  rayling  retournes  to  this 

government    or    authoritje  heere,  —  wherevpon   this   Court,   considering   the 

;Pmisses,  doth  declare  the  sajd  Bonighton  a  rcbell,  or  coiiion  enemy,  &  intend 

to  proceede  ag'  him  accordingly  j  yett  because  this  Court  is  very  loath  to  vse 

extremitje,  (if  it  may  stand  w*  justice,  our  peace  and  honiio'',  to  excercise  some 

further  delay,)  therefore  this  Court  doth  hereby  expresse  themselves  willing 


344 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1G58. 


26  May. 


March  23, 
1657-8. 


to  glue  the  sajd  Bonighton  time  till  the  first  day  of  August  next  peaceably 
to  render  himself  into  the  hands  of  the  Governo'  &  such  other  of  the  magis- 
trates as  shall  then  be  in  or  neere  Boston,  that  his  case  being  duly  &  season- 
ably considered,  there  may  be  such  an  issue  put  to  the  same  as  shall  be  meete, 
which  clemency  thus  rendered  if  neglected  or  contemned,  it  is  resolved  by 
this  Court  to  proceede  ag'  him  as  a  rebell  or  coiuon  enemy  to  the  people  of 
these  parts  of  New  England,  &  this  government  in  spetiall,  to  the  people  in 
habiting  neare  vnto  the  place  of  his  residence.  And  further,  this  Court  doth 
impower  any  person  that  hath  submitted  to  this  government,  after  the  I'''  of 
August,  to  aphend  the  sajd  Bonnighton  by  force,  &  bring  him,  aliue  or  dead, 
to  Boston,  declaring  &  proclayming  that  whosoeuer  shall  so  do  shall  haue 
twenty  pounds  pajd  him  for  his  service  to  the  country,  out  of  y^  coinon 
tresury,  w'^''  may  be  levied  w""  other  charges  vpon  the  sd  Bonnighton  his 
estate. 

Layd  out  to  Harvard  Colledge,  at  Cambridge,  in  lejw  of  a  graunt  made 
them  of  two  thousand  acres  of  land  at  a  Generall  Court,  held  at  Boston,  these 

CoUedge  2000 

acres  lajd  out.  senerall  parcells  of  land  in  manner  following,  viz* :  on  the  east  side  of  Pequot 
Eiuer  one  parcell  of  land,  by  estimation  about  fine  hundred  acres  of  land, 
more  or  lesse,  being  bounded  w""  Wequatucq^uet  Riuer,  running  by  Willjam 
Cheseboroughs  houses  on  the  east  &  north  east  thereof,  &  contjnuing  vpon 
the  sajd  riuer  vnto  the  head  thereof,  and  w*""  a  path  leading  from  Misticke 
vnto  Kechemag,  or  the  wading  place  ouer  Pauquatucke  Riuer  on  the  south 
east  thereof,  y"  w'^''  path  is  the  head  of  W"  Chesbroughs  land,  &  on  the  west 
with  the  wildernes ;  also  one  other  parcell,  by  estimation  about  fiue  hundred 
acres,  more  or  lesse,  lying  vpon  INIistick  Riuer,  begining  about  forty  pole  on 
the  south  side  the  brooke  that  runneth  into  the  sajd  riuer,  neere  to  Goodman 
Culuers  house,  &  extending  from  the  sajd  riuer  halfe  a  mile  on  each  side 
thereof,  &  runig  vp  the  riuer  forty  poles  aboue  the  north  side  of  the  swampe, 
lying  at  the  north  end  of  the  plajne,  and  there  to  be  in  breadth  on  each  side 
the  riuer  as  before  named;  and  the  sajd  Ijnes  to  be  made  streight  Ijnes,  &  not  to 
runne  crooked  as  the  riuer  runneth;  also  one  other  parcell,  by  estimation 
about  fiue  hundred  acres,  more  or  lesse,  being  bounded  w""  a  parcell  of  land 
lajd  out  vnto  Thomas  Prentice  on  y"  west,  w*"*  the  sound  on  the  south,  on  the 
east  w"*  "Wignapaug,  &  on  the  west  w"'  the  coinon  land. 
[*28T.]  *Also,  on  the  west  side  of  Misticke  Riuer  fiue  hundi-ed  acres  more,  to  be 

lajd  out  vpon  the  great  plajne,  about  two  miles,  more  or  lesse,  from  Goodman 
Culuers  house  ;  also,  one  hundi-ed  acres  of  meadow,  of  the  neercst  that  may 
be  found  w"'  the  aboue  sajd  fiirmes  on  ISIisticke  Riuer,  the  which  two  last 
parcels  to  be  lajd  out  by  Capt  Georg  Dennison  &  M'  Thomas  Danforth. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY  IN   NEW  ENGLAND.  345 

In  ans"^  to  the  petiSSn  of  M'  Thomas  Danforth,  who  lajd  out  the  lands      16  5  8. 
ahoue  mencbned,  w"^''  the  Court  allowes  oiF  &  confiermes,  and  judgeth  it  meete  '' 

26  May. 

to  graunt  vnto  the  sajd  M"  Thomas  Danforth  three  hundred  acres  of  land,  to  ^^j,  ^^  ^j, 
be  laid  out  vnto  him  adjoining  to  the  west  side  of  the  colledg  lands  y'  lyeth  ^^.'''°'^}'\'^^' 

•*  "  tition,  &  300 

at  the  head  of  W"  Cheesbroughs  land,  &  to  be  bounded  by  Capt  George  acres  graunted 

to  him. 

Dennison. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  proclamation  referring  to  John  Bonighton  be  sent 
by  the  deputy  of  Yorke,  who  is  hereby  desired  to  take  care  for  the  publishing 
thereof  in  those  parts,  according  to  y'  order. 

The  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  allow  off  &  confinne  the  deede  of  sale  Gilberts  deed 
made  by  the  widdow  EUzabeth  Gilbert  to  Charles  Gott,  bearing  date  y*  30"»  ch"  ri^  Go°tt. 
March,  1658,  w'=''  is  on  file. 

This  Coi-U-t  being  solicjted,  by  one  of  the  inhabitants  of  Northhampton  in  M'  Mathers 

_,,.  ,..  .  ....  -    encourage- 

the  name  of  the  rest,  to  comend  theire  condition,  wanting  an  able  minister  of  ^^^^  ^^  North 
the  gospell  to  administer  the  things  of  God  vnto  them,  to  the  reuerend  elders,  Hampton, 
w*  this  Court  take  themselves  bound  to  further  what  Ijeth  in  theire  power, 
and  vnderstanding  that  some  of  the  sajd  inhabitants  haue  an  eye  vnto  M' 
Eliazer  Mather  as  a  fitt  man  to  administer  the  things  of  God  vnto  them,  this 
Coiu-t  judgeth  it  meete  to  declare  y',  in  case  God  so  encljnes  the  harts  of  those 
who  are  concerned  therein,  y'  ^M'^  Mather  goe  vnto  North  Hampton  to  minis- 
ter vnto  the  inhabitants  there  in  the  things  of  God,  they  both  approove  there- 
of, &  shall  be  ready  at  all  times  to  encourage  him  in  that  service  as  there  shall 
be  occasion,  in  whatsoeuer  may  rationally  &  meetly  be  expected. 

This  Courts  adjourned  to  the  3*  Twesday  in  October  next,  at  eight  of  the 
clocke  in  y^  morning. 


Mt  the  second  Sessions  of  the  GeneraU  Court,  held  at  Boston,  the    i9  October. 

19^  of  October,  1658. 

THE  Court  mett  againe  at  the  tjme  appointed. 
Whereas  there  is  a  pernitious  sect,   comonly  called  Quakers,  lately  Law  ag'  y« 

0 11  aIc  prs 

risen,  who,  by  word  &  writing,  haue  published  &  maintayned  many  dajn- 
gerous  &  horrid  tennetts,  and  doe  take  vpon  them  to  chainge  and  alter  the  re- 
ceived laudable  customes  of  our  nation  in  giving  ciuill  respect  to  sequalls  or 
reuerence  to  superiors,  whose  actions  tend  to  vndermine  the  authority  of  civill 
gouemment,  as  also  to  destroy  the  order  of  the  churches,  by  denying  all 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  44 


19  October. 


346  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1G58.  established  formes  of  worship,  and  by -w^di-awing  from  the  orderly  church 
assembljes  allowed  &  approoved  by  all  orthodox  profFcssors  of  the  truth,  and 
insteed  thereof,  and  in  opposition  therevnto,  frequenting  private  meetings  of 
theire  oune,  insinuating  themselves  into  the  minds  of  the  simpler,  or  such  as 
are  lesse  affected  to  the  order  &  goueriunent  in  church  and  comonwealth, 
whereby  diuerse  of  our  inhabitants  haue  binn  infected  &  seduced,  and  notw*''- 
standing  all  former  lawes  made  (vpon  experience  of  theire  arrogant,  bold  ob- 
trusions to  disseminate  theire "  principles  amongst  vs)  prohibbitting  theii-e 
coming  into  this  jurisdiction,  they  haue  not  binn  deterred  from  theire  impetu- 
ous attempts  to  vndermine  our  peace  and  hasten  our  mine. 

For  prevention  whereof,  this  Court  doth  order  &  enact,  that  euery  person 
or  persons  of  the  cursed  sect  of  the  Quakers,  who  is  not  an  inhabitant  off  but 
found  w*''in  this  jurisdiction,  shall  be  ap^hended,  (without  warrant,)  where  no 
magistrate  is  at  hand,  by  any  connstable,  comissioner,  or  selectman,  and  con- 
veyed from  connstable  to  connstable,  vntill  they  come  before  the  next  magis- 
trate, who  shall  coiiiitt  the  sajd  person  or  persons  to  close  prison,  there  to 

[*  288.1  remajne  *without  bayle  vntill  the  next  Court  of  Asistants,  where  they  shall 
haue  a  legall  tijall  by  a  sijeciall  jiuy,  &  being  con-sicted  to  be  of  the  sect  of 
the  Quakers,  shall  be  sentenced  to  bannishment  vpon  pajne  of  death ;  and  that 
euery  inhabitant  of  this  jurisdiction  being  convicted  to  be  of  the  aforesajd 
sect,  either  by  taking  vp,  publishing,  &  defending  the  horrid  opinions  of  the 
Quakers,  or  by  stirring  vp  mutiny,  sedition,  or  rebelljon  against  the  govern- 
ment, or  by  taking  vp  theire  absurd  &  destructiue  practises,  viz',  denpng 
civil  respect  &  reuerence  to  sequalls  &  superiors,  w"'drawing  from  oiu-  church 
assembljes,  &  insteed  thereof  frequenting  private  meetings  of  theire  oune  in 
opposition  to  church  order,  or  by  adhering  to  or  approoving  of  any  knoune 
Quaker,  or  the  tenetts  &  practises  of  the  Quakers,  that  are  opposite  to  the 
orthodoxe  received  opinions  &  practises  of  the  godly,  and  endeavoring  to  dis- 
affect  others  to  ciuill  gouernment  &  church  order,  and  condemning  the  prac- 
tise &  proceedings  of  this  Court  against  the  Quakers,  manifesting  thereby 
theire  comjDljance  w''-^  those  whose  designe  it  is  to  ouerthrow  the  order  estab- 
lished in  church  and  coinonwealth,  euery  sucli  person,  vpon  examination  & 
legall  conviction  before  the  Court  of  Asistants,  in  manner  as  aboue  sajd, 
shall  be  coiiiitted  to  close  prison  for  one  moneth,  &  then,  vnlcsse  they  choose 
voluntarily  to  depart  the  jurisdiction,  shall  giue  bond  for  theire  good  abbear- 
ance  &  appearance  at  the  next  Court  of  Asistants,  where  continuing  obstinate 
and  refusing  to  retract  &  reforme  the  aforesajd  opinions  and  practises,  shallbe 
sentenced  to  bannishment  upon  pajne  of  death ;  and  in  case  of  the  aforesajd 


19  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  347 

voluntary  departure,  not  to  remajne  or  againe  to  retourne  into  this  jurisdiction  16  58. 
■\v"'out  the  alowancc  of  the  majo'"  part  of  the  couucill  first  had  &  published, 
on  poenalty  of  being  banished  vpon  pajne  of  death ;  and  any  one  magistrate, 
vpon  information  giuen  him  of  any  such  person,  shall  cause  them  to  be  ap^- 
hended,  and  if,  vpon  examination  of  the  case,  he  shall,  according  to  his  best 
discretion,  finde  just  ground  for  such  complainte,  he  shall  coiuitt  such  person 
to  prison  vntill  he  come  to  his  trjall,  as  is  aboue  expressed. 

Whereas  by  too  sad  experience  it  is  observed,  the  sunn  being  sett,  both  Lavre  to  pTent 
euery  Saturday  &  on  the  Lords  day,  young  people  &  others  take  liberty  to  ^]^^  Saboath. 
walke  &  sporte  themselves  in  the  streets  or  fcilds  in  the  seuerall  tounes  of  this 
jurisdiction,  to  the  dishonor  of  God  and  the  disturbance  of  others  in  theire  re- 
ligious excercises,  and  too  frequently  repajre  to  publicque  houses  of  entertajue- 
ment,  &  there  sitt  drincking,  all  wliich  tends,  not  only  to  the  hindering  of 
due  preparation  for  the  Saboath,  but  asmuch  as  in  them  Ijes  renders  the  ordi- 
nances of  God  altogether  vnprofitable,  &  threatnes  rooting  out  of  the  power 
of  godljnes,  and  procming  the  wrath  &  judgments  of  God  vpon  vs  and  our 
posteritje,  for  the  prevention  whereof  itt  is  ordered  by  this  Coiu-te  &  the 
authoritje  thereof,  that  if  any  person  or  persons  henceforth,  either  on  the 
Saturday  night  or  Lords  day  night  after  the  sunue  is  sett,  shallbe  found 
sporting  in  the  streets  or  feilds  of  any  toune  in  this  jurisdiction,  drincking, 
or  being  in  any  house  of  entertajnement,  (vnlesse  straingers  or  sojourners,  as 
in  theire  lodgings,)  &  cannot  giue  a  sattisfactory  reason  to  such  magistrate  or 
comissioner  in  y"  seuerall  tounes  as  shall  haue  the  cognizance  thereof,  euery 
such  person  so  found,  complajned  of,  &  prooved  transgressing  shall  pay  fine 
shillings  for  euery  such  transgression,  or  suffer  corporall  punishment,  as 
authoritje  aforesajd  shall  determine. 

This  Court,  finding  some  inconveniences  aiising  by  having  so  many  per-  Law  cnjoyning 

.  .  T  ^  c  11^'*  p'sons  only 

sons  nommated  in  the  annuall  chojce  of  magistrates,  doe  thereiore  order,  that  to  i,g  p„^^  ^g 
henceforth  only  to  the  nomnber  of  fow''teene  psons  shall  be  nominated  by  the  ^°''':  '^"'  ^"^ 

•'  ±  "J  magisti'atcs. 

freemen  annually  in  the  vsuall  manner,  and  put  to  vote  on  the  day  *of  elec-      r*289  I 
tion ;  &  that  clause  of  the  printed  lawe  injoyning  the  nomination  of  twenty 
persons  is  heereby  repealed  till  the  Court  see  meete  againe  to  revive  it. 

This  Court,  taking  into  theire  serious  consideration  the  Lords  displeasure  Day  of  humil- 
against  vs  in  the  sad  divissions  in  seuerall  churches,  the  arrogance  & 
boldnes  of  open  opposers  of  the  truth  &  wajes  of  the  Lord,  vnseasonable 
rajnes,  &  mortallitje  in  diuers  places,  and  soundry  other  respects,  doe  judge 
meete,  that  the  second  fowerth  day  of  the  weeke  in  the  next  moneth  be  kept 
by  all  the  people  of  this  jurisdiction  a  solemne  day  of  humilljation  for  in- 
treating   the    Lords    favorable   presence   yett  to  be  contjnewed  to  his  poore 


348 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1658. 


19  October. 
Prises  of  all 
sorts  of  corne 
to  y*  countrje 
rate. 


M'  Norton  to 
drawe  a  decla- 
ration to  discu 
y»  en'ors  of  y« 
Quakers,  &c. 


Major  Hath- 
orn,  Salem ; 
M'  Rich.  Rus- 
sell, Charles 
Toune. 


Coniissioners 
of  Portsmouth, 


Ans'  to  Capt. 

Gerish  petiCon 
refering  to 
Louies  estate. 


people  &  churches  in  these  ends  of  the  earth,  and  to  the  rising  generation 
after  vs. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  &  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  all  sorts  of 
corne  shall  be  pajd  in  the  countrje  rate  for  this  yeare  ensuing  at  the  prizes  fol- 
lowing :  viz.,  wheate  at  flue  shillings  p  bushell,  rye,  pease,  barly,  &  barly 
mault  at  fower  shillings  p  bushell,  &  Indjan  at  two  shillings  eight  pence  p 
bushell,  &  all  other  things  payd  in  the  country  rate  to  be  valued  according  to 
the  prises  of  all  sorts  of  corne  aboue  mentioned,  or  as  the  Tresurer  &  the 
connstable  cann  agree ;  provided,  that  no  leane  cattle  shallbe  pajd  in  any 
toune,  nor  aboue  one  third  part  in  Indian  &  rye,  and  also  that  there  be  an  ad- 
dition of  one  quarter  parte  of  a  single  rate  more  for  the  due  discharge  of  the 
country  engagements. 

Whereas  this  Court,  well  vnderstanding  the  daingerous  events  of  the  doc- 
trines &  practises  of  the  Quakers,  hath  by  lawe  endeavored  to  prevent  the 
same,  but  finding  that  some  of  them  doe  disperse  theire  papers,  so  expressing 
themselves  therein  as  that  they  may  deceive  diuers  of  weake  capacitjes,  and  so 
drawe  them  on  to  favor  theire  opinions  &  wajes,  —  now,  for  the  further  pre- 
vention of  infection,  &  guiding  of  people  in  the  truth,  in  refference  to  such 
opinions,  heresies,  or  blasphemjes  by  them  expressed  in  theire  bookes,  letters, 
or  by  words  openly  held  forth  by  some  of  them,  the  Court  judgeth  meete, 
that  there  be  a  writing  or  declaratjon  draune  vj),  &  forthwith  printed,  to  mani- 
fest the  evill  of  theire  tenets  and  dainger  of  theire  practises  as  tending  to  the 
subvertlon  of  rehgion,  of  church  order,  &  civill  government,  and  the  neces- 
sitje  that  this  gouernment  is  put  vpon  (for  the  preservation  of  religion  & 
theire  oune  peace  &  safety)  to  exclude  such  persons  from  amongst  them,  who, 
after  due  meanes  of  conviction,  shall  remajne  obstinate  &  pertinatious ;  and 
this  worke  the  Coiu't  doth  coinend  to  the  care  &  pajnes  of  the  Reuerend  M' 
John  Norton  speedily  to  effect. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Majo''  W™  Hauthorne  for  Salem,  and  M''  Richard 
Russell  for  Charles  Toune,  shall  &  hereby  is  impowred  to  act  in  the  sajd 
tonnes  in  all  crjminall  cases,  marriages,  giving  oathes  in  civill  cases,  as  any 
one  magistrate  may  do. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Cap?  Thomas  "Wiggin  shall  &  hereby  is  impowred  to 
administer  the  coinissioners  oath  to  Cap?  Brjan  Pendleton,  Henry  Sherborne, 
&  Elias  Stileman  for  this  yeare,  when  they  repajre  to  him,  signifying  vnder 
the  constables  hand  the  legallity  of  theire  chojce  for  y'  end  for  the  toune  of 
Portsmouth. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Capt  Willjam  Gerrish,  one  of  the  ouerseers 
of  the  last  will  &  testament  of  Elizabeth  Lowle,  humbly  desiring  that  there 


19  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  349 

might  be  some  sure  order  by  this  Court  made  for  the  increase  &  preservation  16  58. 
of  that  estate  for  the  bennefitt  of  the  chiklren,  be  y'  he,  w"^  the  rest  of  the 
ouerseers,  might  be  impoured  &  enabled  to  put  the  same  forth  on  the  best 
termes  they  may,  &  taking  security  of  the  brother  of  the  children  of  the  sd 
Elizabeth  Lowle,  or  others,  as  they  judge  meete,  &  that  without  damage  to 
theire  dune  estates,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  the  request  aboue 
mentioned,  and  doe  hereby  impower  the  sajd  ouerseers  to  lett  out  the  aboue 
mentioned  estate  to  y"  sajd  brother,  or  others,  as  they  shall  judge  best,  taking 
such  secuiitje  by  house  &  land  for  the  principle  &  increase  as  they  cann. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Quakers  in  prison  at  Ipswich  be  forthwith  sent  f*  290.1 
for,  warrant  issued  out  accordingly,  &  retourne  of  the  warrant  made.     The  Courts  sen- 

tance  ag'  6 

Court  convented  the  sajd  Quakers  before  them,  and  after  much  endeavor  to  Quakers. 
convince  &  reforme  them,  ordered,  y'  Samuell  Shattocke,  Laui'enc  South- 
wicke,  &  Cassandra  Southwicke,  his  wife,  Nicho  Phelps,  Joshua  Buffam,  & 
Josiah  Southwicke  shallbe  enjoyned  at  theii-e  perrill  to  depte  out  of  this  juris- 
diction before  the  first  day  of  the  Court  of  Election  next,  W^''  if  they  neglect 
or  refuse  to  doe,  they  shall  be  then  banished,  vnder  payne  of  death ;  and  if  in 
the  meane  time  they  shall  transgresse  ag'  the  new  lawe  made  this  Court 
against  Quakers,  they  shall  be  proceeded  w"'  as  the  sajd  lawe  requu-es  ;  and 
it  is  referd  to  the  County  Court  of  Suffolke  to  declare  this  sentence  to  them, 
and  therevpon  to  release  them  out  of  prison. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Misticke,  the  Court,  having  Ans'  to  Mis- 
heard what  the  inhabitants  of  Charles  Toune  &  Misticke  could  say,  doe  deter-  *"''"'  '"''*.^' 

■'  itauts  peticon, 

mine  that  the  inhabitants  of  Misticke  shall  haue  halfe  proportions  w"'  the  rest 
of  the  inhabitants  of  Charls  Toune  in  the  coinons  lately  djvided  at  Charls 
Toune,  Misticke  Eiuer,  except  Charlstoune  leaue  the  inhabitants  of  Misticke 
and  theire  lands  to  Maulden,  and  Maulden  accept  them  to  such  libertjes  of 
coiiionage  w'*"  them  as  other  theire  inhabitants  haue. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Alexander  Becke,  in  the  behalfe  &  w"'  y^  hum-  Ans'  to  Alex- 
ble  desier  of  Elizabeth  Orrice,  a  poore  lame  majd,  that  he  might  be  sattisfied  petiConT 
for  his  keeping  of  liir,  &  she  retourned  to  hir  freinds  in  England,  the  Court 
judgeth  it  meete  to  referr  the  peticoner  to  y"  County  Court,  who  are  hereby 
irapowred  to  order  him  sattisfaction  as  they  shall  judg  meete. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Samuell  Greene,  of  Cambridge,  printer,  the  Ans'  to  Sam. 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  for  his  encouragement,  &6,  to  graunt  him  three  hun-  jJn^oo  '"^■» 
dred  acres  of  land  where  it  is  to  be  found.  g'''^'^- 

In  ans'  to  the  request  of  Cap?  Thomas  Clarke  &  Lef  ?  "W"  Phillips,  on  xho.  Lake,  en- 
behalf  of  the    North    Company,    in    Boston,    humbly  desiring   this    Courte  ^'^"^' 


350 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1658. 

19  October. 
M'  Greens 
liberty  to  visit 
his  fireinds. 


Courts  judg- 
ment in  Wall 
&  Colcords 
case. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Symons  mocon 
to  lay  out  500 
ac",  &c. 


County  Courts 
order  for  m^  of 
house  of  cor- 
rection ffees 
coniii'med. 

[*291.] 

Rectifying  y 
eastward  ar- 
rears. 


confirmation  of  Thomas  Lake  in  the  place  of  ensigne  to  y'  company,  the 
Court  graiints  theire  request. 

Att  the  request  of  the  secretary,  leaue  &  liberty  is  graunted  to  M'  John 
Greene,  Sen,  of  Warwicke,  to  visite  his  freinds  for  one  moneth  some  tjmes 
the  next  somer,  he  behaving  himselfe  peaceably  &  innofFenciuely. 

In  answer  to  y"  petition  of  John  Lithermore  &  John  Sherman,  execcutors 
to  y^  will  of  Thomas  Hamond,  late  of  Water  Tonne,  deceased,  humbly  desir- 
ing to  be  impowred  by  this  Court  to  make  sale  of  the  land  of  y'=  sd  Hamonds 
to  pay  y""  remajnder  of  his  debts  &  maintejne  his  child,  the  Court  judgeth  it 
meete  to  referr  the  exaniinatjon  of  this  buisnes  to  y^  next  County  Court  in 
INIidlesex,  who  haue  power  to  send  for  wittnesses  &  parties  concerned,  &  to 
make  retourne  of  what  they  finde  in  the  case  to  y^  next  Court  of  Election. 

The  Court,  on  pervsall  of  the  evidences  in  the  case  betweene  James  Wall 
and  Edward  Colcord,  doe  judge  that  James  Wall  shall  liane  and  keepe  pos- 
session of  the  sawe  mill  till  Edward  Colcord  make  sattisfaction  for  the  purchase, 
and  that  on  Colcords  sattisfaction  as  aboue,  James  Wall  shall  make  good  his 
whole  bargaine  to  the  sd  Colcord. 

In  ans'  to  the  request  of  ]\I''  Samuell  Symonds,  humbly  desiring  that 
Capt  George  Dennison,  M"'  Thomas  Dauforth,  &  INI""  Amos  Richison  might  be 
impowred  to  lay  out  the  fine  hundred  acres  of  land  formerly  graunted  him 
in  the  Pequot  country,  for  his  vse  and  bennefitt,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to 
graunt  his  request. 

In  ans'^  to  the  petition  of  Capt  Edward  Hutchinson,  this  Court  declares, 
that  they  doe  allow  &  approove  of  the  fees  w'='^  the  order  of  the  County  Court, 
bearing  date  30  July,  57,  setts  doune  for  the  keeper  to  take  till  this  Court 
takes  further  order. 

*Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  coiiiis- 
sion^'s  of  Douer,  and  Portsmoiith,  &  Yorke  shall  annually  choose  some  meete 
persons  in  theire  seuerall  tounes  to  levy  the  summe  of  seventeene  pounds 
tenn  shillings,  payable  to  the  countrje  Tresurer,  as  also  for  the  arrears  that 
are  behind  since  the  order  was  made,  for  the  payment  thereof;  and  that  all 
the  inhabitants  to  the  eastward  of  Exiter  bounds,  m'""  M'  Hiltons  plantation, 
shall  be  accounted  w"'in  this  county  &  for  the  county  of  Yorke,  to  take  in  all  the 
inhabitants,  except  those  of  Scarbrough  &  Falmouth,  who  are  hereby  enjopicd 
to  contribute  to  the  payment  of  the  aforesajd  seventeene  pounds  tenn  shillings. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  C'ouite  &  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  booke  of 
lawes,  as  they  haue  biiin  revised  &  corrected  &  put  into  forme  by  order  of  this 
Court,  together  w"^  the  alteratjons  &  additions  heere  vnder  expressed,  shall 
forthwith  be  printed,  &  be  of  force  in  one  moneth  after  the  same,  and  that 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  351 

there  shallbe  a  perfect  table  made  therevnto  what  remajnes  yett  to  be  donnc,      1  G  5  8. 
to  be  prepared  for  the  presse  by  our-  honnored  maio'  gen"j  and  that  in  the    '       '      ^ 

19  October. 

meane  tjme  the  lawes  stand  in  force  as  now  they  be. 

1  quaes.    Whether  any  appeales  in  civill  cases  shall  be  graunted  to  the  Addiccon  to  y= 
Generall  Court,  it  was  voted  by  the  Generall  Court  to  be  according  to  the  f^^  prenting 
new  copie.  *''• 

2.  Whither  any  appeale  shall  be  graunted  in  capitall  cases,  except  in 
case  where  two  of  fiue,  or  three  of  seven,  shall  dissent.  Resolved  on  the 
negative. 

3.  Whither  actions  of  trespasse  vnder  forty  shillings  may  come  to  County 
Covuts.     Resolved  in  the  negative. 

4.  Whither  Boston  comissioners  may  graunt  warrant  against  any  pson 
w"'out  the  Ijmitts  of  theire  toune,  and  that  the  comissioners  power  shall 
reach  the  whole  bounds  of  the  toune,  both  which  was  resolved  in  the  afhi'- 
mative. 

5.  Whither  it  shall  be  in  the  power  of  the  majo'^  part  of  any  toune  to 
order  the  supply  of  theu'e  ministers,  with  a  house  by  purchase,  hu-e,  or  some 
of  money  in  lejw  thereof,  at  theire  pleasure.  Resolved  in  the  affirmative,  j)ro- 
vidcd  it  extend  not  to  those  which  haue  houses  already. 

6  q.  Whither  there  be  any  ferrjes  free.  Resolved  in  the  affii-mative  for 
magistrates  &  deputjes  &  others,  when  they  are  vpon  countrje  service. 

7.  Concerning  executions,  the  new  draught  is  voted  to  stand,  provided 
be  added  thereto,  vnder  the  pocnalty  of  double  damages. 

Itt  is  ordered,  y'  when  the  present  coppy  of  y"  lawes  is  fEnished  by  the 
major  generall,  that  they  be  sent  to  the  Tresurer,  who  shall  take  care  that 
they  be  printed  as  speedily  as  maybe  ;  also,  that  the  preface  to  the  old  lawe 
booke,  w*  such  alterations  as  shall  be  judged  meete  by  the  Gouerno'  &  majo"^ 
generall  be  added  therevnto,  and  presented  to  the  Generall  Court  to  be  ap- 
prooved  of;  and  M''  Danforth  is  appointed  to  ouersee  the  impression. 

Whereas  this  Court  in  May  last,  on  a  hearing  of  a  petition  from  the  In-  Courts  judg- 
habitants  of  Salisbury,  ordered  &  appointed  the  inhabitants  of  the  new  toune  ■     ,.c7nhabit- 
to  attend  the  publicke  worship  of  God  on  the  Lords  dajes  at  the  old  toune,  *"'^  "^  "'="' 

toune  at  Salia- 

which  order  this  Court  hath  blnn  fully  informed  that  Joseph  Peasely,  &  the  bury 
rest  of  the  inhabitants  there,  haue  generally  slighted  &  neglected,  it  is  there- 
fore ordered  by  the  authoritje  of  this  Court,  that  the  recorder  for  the  county 
of  Norfolke  fforthwith  issue  out  his  warrants  requiring  Joseph  Peasely,  &  the 
rest  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  new  toune,  being  masters  of  familjes,  or  at 
theii'e  owne  dispose,  to  make  theu'e  personall  appearances  before  the  next 
County  Court  to  be  held  at  Salisbury,  to  answer  for  theire  dlsobedjence  to 


352 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Lef*  Fishers 
license  for 
strong  waters. 


[*292.] 

Ans'  to  Tops- 
feild  peticon 
referring  to  y« 
&  Salem  lands. 


County  Courts 
adjoxirnment. 


Maj'  Hau- 
thornes  letter 
of  attourney 
nulled. 

Ans»  to  Jerre. 
Belchars  peti- 
tion. 


Courts  resolu- 
tion ab'  M" 
Footes  thirds. 


authorltje  in  not  complying  w"*  the  sajd  order ;  and  the  sajd  County  Court  is 
hereby  impowred,  authorized,  &  required  to  proceede  ag*  all  such  of  them  as 
in  theire  ajjpearance  shall  not  fully  make  it  cleare  they  haue,  since  the  sajd 
order,  performed  theire  duty,  and  repajred  to  the  publick  worshipp  of  God 
on  the  Lords  day  at  the  old  toune,  to  fine  them  for  euery  days  absence  there 
fiue  shillings. 

In  ans""  to  y^  request  of  the  selectmen  of  Dedham,  desiring,  in  regard  of 
theire  remotenes  from  Boston,  Lef  ?  Joshua  Fisher  might  haue  Uberty  to  sell 
some  strong  waters,  to  supply  y*  necessity  of  such  as  shall  stand  in  neede 
thereof  in  that  toune,  the  Court  graunts  theu-e  request. 

*In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Topsfeild,  it  being  put  to  the 
question  whither  the  bounds  of  Salem  shall  be  accompted  to  runne  from  the 
meetinghouse  sixe  miles  into  the  woods,  and  no  more,  alwajes  provided  that 
the  particcular  persons  to  whom  lands  haue  binn  graunted  by  Salem,  w*''in 
Topsfeild  Ijne,  shall  belong  to  the  proprietors,  the  Court  resolved  this  queestion 
in  the  affirmative. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  next  County  Court,  that  should  beginne  on  Twes- 
day  next,  the  26"^  of  y°  instant  October,  shallbe  adjourned  till  Twesday  come 
three  weekes,  &  that  all  warrants  &  attachments  aheady  served,  &  what  heere- 
after  shall  be  graunted,  to  be  served  sixe  dayes  before  the  sajd  Court,  accord- 
ing to  law,  shall  stand  good. 

The  Court,  hauing  considered  of  the  letter  of  attourney  made  by  M'  Jn° 
Giiford  to  ]\Iajo'  "W™  Hauthorne,  in  refierenc  to  y"=  case  now  in  Court,  doe 
judg  that  the  sajd  letter  of  attoiu-ney  is  not  good  in  lawe. 

In  ans"^  to  the  peticon  of  Jerremiah  Belchar,  humbly  craving  the  remitt- 
ment  of  the  fine  of  ffifty  two  pounds  imposed  on  him  by  the  last  Ipswich 
Court  for  selling  strong  water,  powder,  &  shott,  the  Court,  considering  the 
petitioner  is  poore  &  an  honest  man,  not  vsing  any  such  trade,  doe  judg 
meete  to  abate  the  sajd  fine  to  five  pounds,  and  doe  allow  his  petition  to  be 
accepted  gi-atis. 

The  surveyo"'  generall,  M'  John  Johnson,  attourney  for  M"  Foote  and 
M''  John  Rodgers,  referring  a  cawse  to  this  Court  concerning  the  thirds  of 
a  howse  and  lands  in  Eoxbury,  w*  were  mortgaged  by  M"^  Foote  to  M""  Nathani: 
Eodgers,  in  sattisfaction  of  a  debt  due  to  M'^  Crane,  and  is  now  in  the  posses- 
sion of  M"'  Rogers  children,  the  thirds  whereof  are  now  challenged  by  the  sajd 
M''^  Foote,  widdow,  according  to  the  law  of  dowrjes,  the  Court,  hauing  heard  the 
pleas  which  were  made,  no  testimony  being  produced  on  either  partje,  doe 
not  find  the  thii-ds  of  the  sajd  house  «&  lands  to  be  due  to  the  sajd  M" 
Foote. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  353 

Cap?  Tho  Sauage,  M'^  Jerremiah  Ilouchin,  Cap?  Tho  Clarke,  M-"  Stoddard,      1  G  5  8. 

M""  Nath  Duncan,  M'  Kicliard  Parker,  &  jNI'^  Edward  Rawson,  being  presented    ^~    '* ' 

by  y'  constable  of  Boston  as  chosen  by  y"  freemen  of  Boston  to  v"  place  of "  "  ^'' 

•'    "^  •"    ''  ^     r  Conussioners 

comissioners,  bad  thelre  oaths  giuen  them  in  open  Generall  Court,  except  M""  "f  Boston 
Parker,  who  was  then  absent. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticoa  of  the  inhabitants  of  Mistick  &  Pauketucke,  the  Ans'  to  Mis- 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  that  the  EngUsh  plantation  betweene  ]Mis-  kutucke  Iti- 
ticke  &  Paucutuke  be  named  Souther  Toune,  &  to  belong  to  the  county  of  ™"'  '^^^^"^ 

,    ~  .  Souther  Toune. 

Suffolke,  &  order  that  all  the  prudentiall  affaires  thereof  be  managed  by 
Cap?  George  Dennison,  Robert  Parkes,  Willjam  Cheesbrooke,  Thomas  Staun- 
ton, Walter  Palmer,  &  John  Minot,  Seil,  till  the  Courte  take  further  order ;  and 
that  Capt  George  Denison,  W™  Cheesbrooke,  &  John  Minot,  Sen,  be  coiiiis- 
sioners  to  end  smale  causes  there,  and  to  deale  in  criminall  matters  as  one 
magistrate  may  doe,  and  that  Walter  Palmer  be  counstable,  Capt  Dennison 
clarkes  of  the  writts  ;  and  he  also  is  hereby  impowred  &  authorized  to  solemnize 
marriages  betweene  such  as  are  published  according  to  law  ;  y'  y»  sajd  Cap? 
Dennison,  taking  his  oath,  be  impowred  to  give  the  oath  to  the  other  two, 
pro\'ided  alwayes  the  bounds  of  the  touue  is  not  hereby  determined. 

In  ans''  to  ^  peticbn  of  the  inhabitants  of  Souther  Toune,  humbly  desiring.  Souther  Toune 
for  seuerall  reasons,  that  the  bounds  of  theire  plantation  may  extend  into  the  ''°™   ' 
country  westward  betweene  Wica  Pauge  &  Misticke  Riuer,  eight  miles  from 
the  mouth  of  Misticke  Riuer,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  theire 
req^uest. 

In  ans'  to  y^  peticbn  of  Richard  Wajte,  who   had  three   hundred  acres  Rich.  Wayts 
of  land  graunted  him  by  this  Court,  20'"  May,  1658,  this  Court  doth  impower  ^'"'  *""'• 
Thomas  Danforth  &  Andrew  Belchar  to  lay  out  the  sajd  graunt  of  three  hun- 
dred acres  in  any  place  w^in  the  Ijmitts  of  this  colony  not  formerly  disposed 
of  by  this  Court. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Cap?  Edward  Johnson  &  John  Carter,  Sarjant      [*293.] 
Edw  Oakes,  M'  Ephrajm  Child,  &  Ensigne  Ro1it  Hale  are  appointed  a  coiiiit-  ^^^'  t°  Capt. 

Johnson  »&  Jn* 

tee,  &  fully  impowred  to  take  oatlies  of  wittnesses  in  y"  case,  if  neede  shall  Carters  peti- 
be,  &  determine  and  setle  the  bounds  of  the  lands  in  controuersy,  w"'  all  costs 
&  damages  occasioned  thereby,  on   hearing  of  all  evidences  betweene  both 
partjes. 

There  having  binn  a  considerable  estate  expended  not  long  since  in  build-  Coinittee  ab« 
ing  &  repayring  the  Castle,  and  some  thing  yett  remaynes  to  be  donne,  w"'out 
which  all  our  past  expences  willbe  to  litle  purpose,  this  Court  doth  therefore 
order,  that  the  Trcsurer  &  the  surveyor  generall  shall  &  hereby  are  appointed 
a  cofiiittee  to  examine  the  accounts  about  the  Castle,  what  hath  binn  received 

VOL.  IV. PART    I.  45 


354 


THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1658. 


19  October. 


Wights  allow- 
ance of  20". 


&  disbursed  about  the  same,  &  what  is  yett  remajniug,  either  in  hand  or  prom- 
ised, towards  the  effecting  the  worke,  &  make  retourne  thereof  to  the  Court  of 
Election.  And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  the  sajd  survejo"^  generall  shall  be 
authorized  &  is  heereby  appointed  to  joyne  w"^  oiu-  honnored  Majo"^  Atherton 
for  the  carrying  an  end  of  that  worke  to  effect,  &  if  neede  shall  so  require, 
to  charge  bills  vjjou  the  Tresurer,  provided  it  exceede  not  the  soiiie  of  fiffty 
pounds. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  Tresurer  for  Suffolke  discharge  &  pay  Henry  Wight, 
counstable,  late  of  Dedham,  the  soiiie  of  twenty  shillings  for  his  charges  al- 
lowed him  for  bringing  doune  Goody  Batchiler  w"^  a  cart,  &5. 


Comittees  re- 
tourne ab* 
ffurrs. 


The  retourne  of  y^  coinittee  betrusted  to  agree  w"*  such  as  p'sented  to 

carry  along  the  trade  of  furrs,  including  in  oiu'  agreements  the  phibbitting 
them  of  trading  comoditjes  by  the  Court  prohibbited :  — 

1.  Imp'".  Wee  contracted  w"'  y''  worpfi'"  Majo'  Willard,  M''  Bren- 

ton,  Ensigne  Wheeler,  &  Tho  Hincksman  for  y"  trade  of  u       s  a 

Merremacke, 025  00  00 

2.  Thomas  Brookes  &  partners  for  the  trade  of  Concord,  .     .     .  005   00  00 

3.  M""  Piuchon  for  the  trade  of  Springfeild  &  of  Norwottocke  for  one 

yeare  in  regard  of  the  present  coiiiotions  among  the  Indeans,  020  00  00 

4.  John  Stedman  for  the  trade  of  Cambridge, 002  00  00 

5.  M"'  John  Tincker  for  y"  trade  of  Nashaway  &  Groaten  for  y^ 

yeare,        008  00  00 

6.  John  Parmiter  for  the  trade  of  Sudbury, 003  00  00 

One  put  in  for  Jn°  Stone  for  Whipsufferadge, 005  00  00 

The  trade  to  beginne  from  the  1*'  of  y^  5  &,  1657,  to  pay  in  beaver. 


The  Court  approoved  of  this  retourne,  &  ordered  it  to  be  recorded. 


W"  Parks  600 
at:"  to  be  lajd 
out. 


There  having  binn  formerly  graunted  fower  thousand  acres  of  land  to  the 
toune  of  Roxbury,  of  which  M"^  AVilljam  Parkes  was  to  haue  one  hundred 
fower  score  &  one  acres,  &  on  his  request  to  the  Court,  there  was  ordered 
such  an  addition  as  might  make  vp  the  same  three  hundred  acres,  as  by  y" 
Courts  orde"^,  anno  1653,  appeares.  And  whereas  there  was  also  a  graunt  of 
thi'ee  hundred  acres  lately  made  to  the  survejor  generall,  which  graunt  he 
hath  sold  to  the  sajd  W"  Parkes,  on  his  request  to  this  Court,  it  is  ordered, 
that  the  sajd  sixe  hundred  acres  of  land  be  lajd  out  at  a  place  called  Three 
Brookes  &  Wading  Riuer,  vnto  a  great  hill  knoune  by  the  name  of  Barr  Hill, 
in  the  way  leading  to  Seacuncke,  w"'  what  meadow  that  place  shall  affoord,  or 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  355 

be  neere  therevnto,  to  be  layd  out  either  by  M"  Thomas  Danforth  or  Lef  I  Joshua      1658. 
Fisher  :  provided  the  said  hxud  be  in  our  jurisdiction,  &  free  from  all  other    *       ^       ^ 

^  19  October. 

graunts. 

Vpon  a  motion  made  to  this  Court  in  the  behalfe  of  Frauncis  Vernon,  Vemons 
the  Coui-t  judgeth  it  meet  to  graunt  to  the  sajd  Vernon  two  hundred  acres  of  ^""° 
land,  where  he  can  fiude  it  according  to  lawe. 

Whereas    this  Court,  the  last  yeare,  at  the  first  sessions,  d  graunt  the  Major  Denni- 
Majo""  Generall  Dennison  fine  hundred  acres  of  land  neere  Norwottocke,  &  at  ,^^6  vp  his  500 
the  sessions  in  October,  on  his  request,  gaue  him  liberty  to  take  the  same  neere  ^"''^■ 
Merremacke  Riuer,  at  his  request  now,  (according  to  his  purpose  &  intent  at 
that  time,)  this  Court  doe  giue  him  liberty  to  take  the  same  either  at  Nor- 
wottucke,  according  to  his  first  graunt,  on  either  side  the  riuer,  or  at  Merremake, 
as  in  the  last. 

*In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Pdciiard  Smith,  humbly  desiring  this  Courts      [*29-l.] 
favo""  so  to  order  it  that  he  may  not  be  exposed  to  misery,  w*''  his  wife,  being  Order  ab' Rich 

•'  omiths  settle- 

denjed  to  haue  his  bargaine  w""  Benja  Muzzey,  &  by  that  meanes  is  harbor-  meut. 
lesse,  &(3,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  referre  the  petitioners  for  releife  to 
next  Court  in  ilidlesex. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Capt  W™  Traske,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  Cap'  Traskea 
to  graunt  him  fewer  hundred  acres  of  land  in  the  recquot  country. 

Whereas  M'  Thomas  Starre,  deceased,  hauing  left  a  desolat  widdow  and  400  acres  of 

■  .  l2"i<l  gr'ed  to 

eight  smalc   children,  was  y"  chirurgeon   ot  one   ot  the   companjes  y'  went  ^.  „iadow 
against  the  Pequotts,  in  ans"'  to  the  request  of  seuerall  gen'°  on  y'  behalfe,  the  ^^^^^ 
Court  judgeth  it  meete   to  graunt  fower  hundred  acres  of  land  to  the  sajd 
widow  &  children,  &  doe  heereby  impower  y"  Tresurer  &  Capt  Norton  to 
make  sale  or  otherwise  to  dispose  of  the  sajd  lands  as  may  best  conduce  to  y° 
benefit  of  the  widdow  &  children  as  they  shall  see  meete. 

Whereas  the  honnorable  Colonell  Thomas  Temple  is,  by  coinission  from  Order  phibbit 

r    A        1  J    AT  ^°S  ^^^  ^^  trade 

his  highnes   the   Lord  Protector,  constituted  gouerno'^  ot  Acady  and  JM  oua  j^^  j^j^  ;„ 
Scotia,  from  Mereliquish  on  the  east,  to  St  Georges  and  Musconcus,  on  the  Colonel  Tem- 

'  ^  '-'  p"  temtorya. 

confines  of  New  England,  on  the  west,  and  is  thereby  impowred  to  seize  and 
confiscatt  the  vessells  and  goods  of  all  persons  trading  peltry  or  furrs  with 
Indians  w'l^out  his  licence,  as  also  to  burne,  kill,  &  destroy  all  such  as  shall 
resist  him,  as  appeareth  by  the  sajd  comission,  bearing  date  Sep'  17,  1656, 
this  Court,  judging  it  meete  to  prevent  all  forcible  contests  or  vnnecessary 
losse  that  maybe  occasioned  by  any  exhorbitant  or  inconsiderat  persons,  as  also 
all  occasions  of  offence  betweene  this  colony  and  the  gouerno""  aforesajd,  being 
also  desirous  that  loving  and  good  correspondency  may  be  cherrished  &  majn- 
teyned,  doth  order,  that  henceforth  it  shall  not  be  lawfull  for  any  person  of 


356 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


Block  Island 
gr'ed  to  y« 
GoUuer,  Dep* 
Gou.,  Major 
Gen.  Denni- 
son,  &  Major 
Hauthorue. 


Capt.  Clarks 
600  acres  lajd 
out. 


this  jurisdiction  to  trade  for  fm-rs  or  peltry  -w""  the  Indjans  w^^in  the  Ijmitts 
aforesajd,  w^'out  license  from  the  sajd  gouerno'^ ;  and  it  shall  be  lawful!  for 
the  sajd  gouerno'',  or  his  attourney,  anthorizcd  thcrevnto  vndcr  his  hand,  to 
arrest,  sue,  &  implead  any  person  or  persons  that  shall  be  found  offending 
herein  in  any  Court  ■within  the  Ijmitts  of  this  colony  in  any  action  of  the 
case  or  trespasse,  and  shall  haue  squall  justice  therein. 

This  Court,  in  consideration  of  the  honnored  Gouerno'',  Jn°  Endecott, 
Es^,  his  great  service  to  this  country,  together  w"'  the  good  service  of  Rich 
Bellingham,  Esqp,  Dep'  Gouerno"',  and  in  respect  of  Major  Geil  Daniell  Den- 
nison,  his  great  paynes  in  transcribing  the  lawes,  &  in  regard  of  jMajo''  W™ 
Hawthornes  surrendring  his  seven  hundred  acres  of  land  formerly  graunted 
to  him,  doe  relinquish  theire  clay  me,  &  doe  graunt  all  theire  right  &  interest 
that  this  Court  haue  or  might  haue  in  Blocke  Island  to  the  aboue  mentioned 
fower  gen'n,  to  each  of  them  a  quarter  parte. 

The  Court  hauing  allowed  Richard  Fellowes,  w"'  some  other  ffitt  man,  to 
lay  out  three  hundred  acres  of  land  for  Capt  Thoin  Clarke,  of  Boston,  which, 
at  the  desier  of  y"  sajd  Clarke,  wee  haue  lajd  out  a  hill  called  Ocquebitucke, 
lying  in  the  wilderness  about  twenty  eight  miles  from  Windsor  on  this  side, 
■w"^  conteynes  fiue  hundred  acres  or  more  by  estimation,  but  he,  conceaving 
the  Court  will  alloAve  the  ovcrjjlus  measure,  the  whole  being  so  on  a  moun- 
tajne,  haue  not  taken  out  any  parte  thereof  till  wee  know  the  further  minde 
of  the  Court,  leaving  the  ffootte  of  the  hill  for  the  bounds  thereof. 

June  y^  16,  1658.  Yo'  servants, 

HENRY  CHAPIN, 
RICHARD  FELLOWS. 

The  Court  approoves  of  these  comissioners  retourne. 

*Whereas  Willjam  Arnold,  of  Pautuxit,  presented  a  petition  at  the  last 
Courts  deter-     sessions  of  this  Court,  that  himself  &  the  rest  of  those  that  had  submitted  to 

minacon  when 

Arnolds  bond  our  gouernmcnt  might  be  disengaged  from  theire  subjection,  ^K''^  this  Court, 
^^to  e  voy  ,  j^  answer  to  his  request,  were  very  ready  to  graunt,  provided  that  the  sajd 
Arnold  gaue  securitje  to  the  Court  to  make  good  what  he  then  desired  to  be 
the  desier  also  of  the  rest  of  our  subjects  there,  wliich  accordingly  he  hath 
donne  to  the  sattisfaction  of  the  Court ;  and  whereas  the  sajd  Arnold  stood 
engaged  in  a  bond  to  be  responsall  to  answer  the  Greenes,  or  any  other,  for 
•what  injury  he  had  donne  to  them  by  virtue  of  this  Courts  coiiiission,  w^^out 
refference  to  any  time  Ijmitted,  this  Court,  on  the  request  of  the  sajd  Arnold, 
judges  it  meete,  and  doe  therefore  order,  that  if  neither  they  nor  any  others 
•whom  it  may  concerne  shall  prosecute  the  sajd  Arnold  for  the  breach  of  his 
coiiiission,  as  aforesajd,  in  one  yeare,  that  then  his  sajd  bond  to  be  voyd. 


[*295.] 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  357 

17SepS1658.  16  58. 

By  order  of  the  Generall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts,  lajd  out  vnto  Jn°  ''  ''  ' 
Mellows,  heyr  of  M"'  Abraham  Mellowes,  deceased,  in  the  I'equott  countrje, 
on  the  east  side  Pauquatuck  Riuer,  two  hundred  acres  of  land,  being  bounded  200. 
w"'  land  lajd  out  to  JNI'  Rawsou  on  the  south,  Pawquatuck  Eiuer  west,  and 
vpon  the  riuer  lying  about  half  a  mile  vp  the  riuer  from  M'  Rawsons  land, 
&  extending  into  the  wildernes  at  eight  score  rods  in  breadth,  so  farr  as  makes 
vp  the  full  quantitie  of  two  hundred  acres. 

Also  lajd  out  to  M''  Deane  Winthrop  fine  hundred  acres  of  land  adjoyn-  M'Dean  Win- 
ing to  the  land  of  Jn°  Mellows,  and  from  thenc  vp  the  aforesajd  riuer  a  full  acres"' 
mile,  and  from  thenc  by  a  parralell  Ijne  to  the  Ijne  betweene  John  Mellowes, 
&  he  extending  into  the  wildernes  so  farr  as  makes  vp  the  full  quantity  of 
fine  hundred  acres.  Also  layd  out,  for  the  accoiiiodation  of  the  sajd  ffarmes, 
all  that  meadow  lying  vpon  the  sajd  Pauquatuck  Riuer,  aboue  the  wading 
place  about  two  miles,  not  exceeding  twenty  acres  to  Jn°  Mellowes  farme,  and 
forty  acres  to  M''  Deane  Winthrops  farme,  the  w'^''  is  also  to  be  accounted  as 
part  of  the  nomber  of  theire  aforesajd  quantity  of  acres. 

THO:  DANFORTH, 
GEORG   DENNISOK 

The  Court  approoves  of  this  retourne,  provided  it  hinder  no  former 
graunts. 

The  retoui-ne  of  the  comissioners  of  the  Generall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts,  Coffiissioners 
being  authorized  and  appointed  to  setle  civill  gouernment  in  the  easterne  ^\^^]^  pojnt 
parts,   to  the  vtmost  extent  of  theire  line,  as  appeares  by   a  comission  ^'''^  Point, 

^  _  J      '  rr  J  Spnruincke,  & 

grauntcd  them  bearing  date  the  SO"'  of  May,  1658.  Casco  Bay,  &o. 

In  refference  wherevnto  the  coinissioners  aforesajd,  whose  names  are  heere 
subscribed,  according  to  order  and  trust  therein  to  them  coiiiitted,  did  rej)aire 
vnto  the  easterne  parts,  and  at  Yorke  did  adjourne  the  Court  vnto  the  house 
of  M''  Robert  Jordan,  at  Spuruincke,  sending  out  suinons  to  all  inhabitants  re- 
siding w"'in  the  Ijne  proposed,  there  to  appeare  personally  before  them,  which 
by  the  majo"'  part  thereof  was  attended,  and  after  some  serious  debate  of  matters 
betwixt  vs,  removall  of  some  doubts,  &  our  tendering  of  some  acts  of  favor  & 
priviledg  to  them,  the  good  hand  of  God  aiding  therein,  by  a  joint  consent 
wee  muttually  accorded,  in  a  free  &  comfortable  close,  as  doth  more  fully  ap- 
peare by  these  ffoUowing  acts  :  — 

"Wee,  the  inhabitants  of  Black  Point,  Blew  Point,  Spuruincke,  &  Casco 
Bay,  with  all  the  islands  therevnto  belonging,  doe  oune  &  acknowledg  our- 


358  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


19  October. 

[»296.] 


1658.  selves  to  be  subject  to  the  gouernment  of  the  Massachusetts  Bay  m  New 
England,  as  appeareth  by  our  particcular  subscriptions,  in  reference  to  those 
*seuerall  articles  formerly  grauuted  vnto  Douer,  Kittery,  &  Yorke,  which  are 
now  graunted  vnto  vs,  together  w""  some  additions,  as  vpou  record  doth 
appeare. 

FRAUNCIS   SMALE, 
NICHO:   WHITE,  W,  m-'ke, 
THO:  STAMFORD,  Q/,  his  mark, 
JONAS   BAYLY,  I,  his  m'k, 
ROBERT   CORBYN, 
NATHANIELL  WALEIJ, 
ARTHUR  AUGUR:,    Juii, 

his  m'k,  1^, 

JOHN   PHILLIPS, 

his  m'^k,  ■LiT) 
m''ke 

RICH:   A  MARTYN, 

m'k 

GEORG   3    LEUIS, 
AMBROSE   BODEN, 

m'k 

SAMUELL   OAKEMAN,  G, 
ANDREW  BEAMES,  m'k,  ^, 
MICH:    MADJUER,  m'k,  ^, 
THO:    HAMOT,    m'ke,  ^, 
GEORG   TAYLOR,  m'ke,  Xt 
HENRY   JOCELYN, 
GEORG   CLEAUE, 
ROBT:   JORDAN, 
JN°  BONIGHTON, 
RICHARD   FOXWELL, 
HENRY  WATTS, 
FRAUNC:    NEALE, 
ABRA:   FELLEW, 
AMBROS   BODEN,  Sen, 
MICH:    WITTEN, 

JN°^   TINNEY, 

m'k 

NICO:  r@-  EDGCOMB. 

Eueiy  of  the  persons  as  aboue  mentioned,  which  haue  subscribed  to  this 


19  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  359 

writting,  haue  further,  by  oath  taken  in  Court,  engaged  themselves  to  this  1  C  5  8. 
authority  of  the  Massachusetts,  at  the  date  heereof,  July  13"',  1658.  Where-  ^  ^ 
as  the  tounes  of  Black  Point,  Blew  Point,  Spurwincke,  and  Casco  Bay  haue 
acknowledged  themselves  subject  to  the  goucrnm'  of  the  Massachusetts,  as 
by  the  seuerall  subscriptions  vnder  theire  hands  doth  appeare,  wee,  the 
comissioners  of  the  Generall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts,  doe  actually  graunt 
as  foUoweth :  — 

1.  In  case,  by  an  imediate  power  from  the  supremacy  of  England,  wee 
are  coiiianded,  &  after  adresse  to  the  same  supremacy  by  the  Massachusetts 
authority,  it  be  desired,  as  propper  to  any  other  regulations  then  ours,  this  ob- 
ligation to  be  nulld,  wee  protecting  them  till  the  determination  thereof. 

2.  That  an  act  of  indempuity  or  obliuion  is  ffreely  graunted  them. 

3.  That  all  such  acts  &  priviledges  as  haue  binn  graunted  to  Douer, 
Strawberry  Baucke,  Kittery,  Yorke,  AVells,  &  Saco,  are  graunted  vnto  them. 

4.  That  in  cases  of  appeale  to  Boston,  the  appellant  shall  haue  ordinary 
costs,  but  shall  put  in  sufficijeut  security  (not  recoming)  to  make  good  treble 
costs  to  the  defendant. 

5.  That  they  shall  haue  true  transcripts  of  such  priviledges  as  haue  binn 
graunted  to  the  forementioned  tounes  sent  vnto  them  to  be  recorded  w"'all 
convenience. 

6.  That  the  civill  priviledges  now  graunted  them  wee  doe  not  intend 
shall  be  forfeited  vpon  differences  in  matters  of  religion,  but  theii-e  regulations 
therein  must  be  according  to  pocnal  lawes. 

7.  That  those  places  that  were  formerly  called  Blacke  Pojnt,  Blew  Point, 
&  ^tons  Islands,  thereto  adjacent,  shall  henceforth  be  called  by  y'  name  of 
Scarborow,  the  bounds  of  which  toune  on  the  westerne  side  begineth  where 
the  toune  of  Saco  endeth,  &  so  doth  runne  along  on  the  westerne  side  of  the 
Riuer  of  Spiu'wincke,  eight  miles  back  into  the  country. 

8.  That  those  places  formerly  called  Spurwincke  &  Casco  Bay,  from  the 
harbor  side  of  Spurwincke  Riuer  to  the  Clapboard  Islands,  in  Casco  Bay,  shall 
runne  back  eight  miles  into  the  country,  and  henceforth  shall  be  called  by  the 
name  of  Falmouth. 

9.  That  the  tounes  of  Scai-borow  &  Falmouth  shall  haue  coiiiissioners 
Courts  to  try  causes  as  high  as  Mty  pounds. 

10.  That  those  two  tounes  of  Scarborough  &  Falmouth  shall,  by  a  sui-- 
vey,  take  an  effectuall  course  to  bound  themselves  betwixt  this  time  &  the 
next  Court  holden  for  this  county,  wherevnto  they  are  to  make  theiie  re- 
tourne,  or  vpon  theire  neglect  thereof  the  County  Court  shall  appoint  coiiiis- 
sioners for  the  bounding  of  them. 


19  October. 


Scarborough. 


360  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

165  8.  11-    That  those  two  tounes  of  Scarborough  &  Falmouth  are  to  send  one 

deputy  yearely  to  the  Court  of  Election,  &  haue  liberty  for  two  deputjes,  if 
they  see  cause,  in  Court.     Given  vndei  oiu-  hand,  July  the  14,  1658. 

SAMUEL   SYMONDS, 
THO:    WIGGIN, 
NICHO:    SHAPLEIGH, 
EDW:    RISHWORTH. 

Whereas  the  county  of  Yorkeshire  is  large  &  very  remote  from  Boston, 
the  place  where  the  Generall  Courts  &  councill  of  this  comonwealth  of  the 
Massachusetts  doe  vsually  assemble,  whereby  it  is  more  difficult  to  obtayne 
the  presence  &  helpe  of  any  of  the  asistants  of  the  gouernment,  as  occasion 
from  tjme  to  tjme  doth  require,  wee,  therefore,  the  coiiiissioners  of  the  Generall 
Coiut,  considering  the  necessitje  of  a  constant  supply  till  the  Generall  ^  take 
[*297.]  further  *order  therein,  do  graunt  &  order  as  foUoweth  :  — 
Falmouth  and  1.    That,  with  the  Consent  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  aforesajd  tounes  of 

Scarborow  and  Falmouth,  wee  doe  constitute  &  appointe  the  right  trusty 
Hemy  Jocelyn,  Esq>,  'SI'  Robert  Jordan,  M"'  George  Cleaue,  M''  Henry  "Watts, 
&  M''  Frauncis  Neale  coiiiissioners  for  the  yeare  ensuing,  invested  w"»  full 
power,  or  any  three  of  them,  for  the  trjall  of  all  cawses  (w*''out  a  jury)  w^'^in 
the  libertjes  of  Scarborough  &  Falmouth  not  exceeding  the  value  of  fiffty 
pounds,  &  euery  one  of  the  sajd  coiiiissioners  haue  graunted  them  magis- 
traticall  power  to  heare  and  determine  smale  causes  as  other  magistrates  and 
asistants  haue,  whither  they  be  of  a  civil  or  ci-iminall  nature  :  any  of  the  sajd 
coiiiissioners  may  graunt  warrants,  soiiions,  &  executions,  if  neede  require,  & 
haue  power  to  examine  offendors,  &  coiiiitt  to  prison,  except  bayle  be  ten- 
dered, according  to  lawe  ;  also,  any  tkree  of  the  sajd  coiiiissioners  haue  power 
to  impowre  millitary  officers  vnder  the  degree  of  a  captaine.  The  sajd  coiiiis- 
sioners are  required  to  enjoy ne  each  toune  to  procure  the  booke  of  lawes  ; 
also,  any  of  the  sajd  comissioners  haue  power  to  minister  oathes,  according  to 
lawe,  and  if  they  judge  needefuU,  to  binde  offendors  to  the  peace  &  good 
behaviour,  or  to  solemnize  marriage,  according  to  lawe.  Any  three  of  the 
coinissioners  haue  also  power  to  receive  in  all  such  persons  living  w"'in  our 
Ijne  as  betweene  this  present  tjme  &  the  last  of  September  shall  come  in  by 
theire  voluntary  subscriptions  :  our  meaning  is,  that  they  should  not  be  barred 
from  having  the  priviledges  that  theire  neighbors  enjoy  by  occasion  of  theire 
necessary  absenc  at  y"  Court. 

2.    That  when  County  Courts  are  called,  &,  through  Providence  hinder- 
ing, that  there  is  none  of  the  Asistants  present  at  Yorke  or  elsewhere,  that 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  301 

the  sajd  county  shall  still  proceed,  &  the  acts  thereof  shall  be  valid  not-      1658. 
w'-standing,  the  associats  of  the  county,  or  any  three  of  them  at  least,  being    ^^^^^ 

then  present. 

3.  AVcc  doe  order,  that  the  associats  chosen  for  this  county,  or  any  three 
of  them,  shall  haue  full  power  (w'^out  a  jury)  to  try  any  such  civill  actions 
as  shall  not  exceed  the  value  of  sixty  pounds. 

4.  Itt  is  licreby  ordered  for  the  easing  of  charges  &  trouble  in  this 
county,  being  so  remote  from  the  excersise  of  authoritje  in  some  considerable 
cases,  that  the  three  comissioners,  or  more,  in  each  toune  in  this  county,  shall 
haue  full  power  to  graunt  letters  of  administration,  to  receave  probats  of  wills, 
to  order  such  estates  as  County  Courts  haue  power  to  doe  in  the  like  cases ; 
provided,  when  any  such  acts  are  putt  forth  by  the  three  coinissioners  of  Scar- 
borough &  Falmouth,  M"^  Henry  Jocelyn  or  W  Robert  Jordan  are  to  be  one 
of  the  three  ;  for  Saco  &  Cape  Porpus,  Capt  Nicholas  Shapleigh  to  be  one  ; 
for  Wells,  M--  Abraham  Preble  to  be  one.  Wee  doe  likewise  graunt  the 
toune  comissioners  of  Yorke  and  Kittery  to  haue  the  same  power  therein  ;  and 
those  particcular  gen'°,  M^  Henry  Joselyn,  M'  Robert  Jordan,  Cap?  Nicholas 
Shapleigh,  M'  Edward  Rushworth,  or  M'  Abraham  Preble,  or  either  of  them, 
shall  haue  magistratticall  power  throughout  the  whole  county  of  Yorkshire  for 
this  yeare  eusmng,  vntill  others  are  chosen  &  sworne  in  theire  places  ;  and  the 
County  Courts  from  tjme  to  tjme  haue  power  to  graunt  &  renew  licenses  for 
ordinarys  for  selhng  of  wine  &  strong  water,  &  for  keeping  of  houses  of  enter- 
tajnment,  according  to  lawe. 

5.  And  whereas  henceforth  there  will  be  neede  of  more  associats  for 
County  Courts  then  formerly,  Avee  doe  giue  power  &  order,  that  there  shall 
be  fiue  chosen  yearely,  whereas  there  were  but  three  before,  and  that  they  may 
keepe  a  County  Court  at  Saco  or  Scarborough,  as  at  Yorke,  in  the  moneth  of 
September  yerely,  provided  that  the  day  and  place  be  agreed  on  vnder  the 
hand  of  three  of  the  associates  at  least,  signified  to  the  recorder  of  the  county, 
so  that  he  may  giue  due  notice  thereof  vnto  the  seucrall  tounes  sixe  weekes 
before  the  sajd  Coiu-t  at  the  least. 

Signed,  SAMUELL   SYMONDS, 

THO:   WIGGIN, 
EDW:   RISHWORTH. 

The  Court,  having  pvsed  this  retourne  of  the  coinissioners  appointed  to 
setle  y^  gouernment  in  y"  eastern  parts,  doe  approove  thereof,  &  thankefuUy 
accept  theire  pajnes  &  endeavors  therein,  &  order  it  shall  be  recorded,  &  the 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  46 


THE    IIECOIIDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


1658. 

19  October. 

[*298.] 

Courts  judg- 
ment in  New- 
bury case  ag' 
Jn<*  Emcrys. 


Courts  judg- 
ment in  Capt. 
Clarke  &  M' 
Hutchinsons 
case. 


Courts  confir- 
mation of  the 
councills  acts 
in  referenc  to 
y  colledg,  itu. 


Courts  ans'  on 
M'  Elljotts 
peticon  refer- 
ring to  M' 
Pradstreets 
farnie,  &c. 


bill  of  charges,  w*  is  on  file,  &  amounts  to  forty  fewer  pounds  fourteene  shil- 
lings &  eight  pence,  be  sattisfied  by  the  Tresurer. 

*The  Court,  having  heard  the  case  relating  to  the  military  company  peti- 
con of  Newbury,  preferrd  by  Jn"  Emory,  Sen,  who,  w""  his  sonnes,  John 
Emery,  Jun,  &  Jn°  Webster  &  Soloman  Keyes,  haue  binn  so  busy  &  forward 
to  disturbe  the  peace  of  the  place  by  tlieirc  actings  in  seuerall  respect,  & 
occationed  much  trouble  to  this  Court  in  refference  thereto,  judg  it  meete  to 
order  that  the  sajd  John  Emery,  Sen,  Jn"  Emery,  Juil,  Jn°  Webster,  &  Solomon 
Keyes  be  seucrally  admonished  to  beware  of  the  like  sinfull  practizes  for  time 
to  come,  w"''  this  Court  will  not  beare ;  and  that  they  pay  the  seuerall  chardges 
of  theire  neighbors  the  last  Court  &  this,  in  coming  for  releife  from  such 
vnder  courses.  Costs  allowed  in  all  was  fower  pounds  eight  shillings,  &: 
ffees. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  humbly  desiring  that 
the  case  betweene  INI"^  Richard  Hutchinson  &  himself,  he  hauing  obtayned 
judgment  ag'  the  sajd  Hutchinson  in  the  County  Court  of  Boston,  Julij  last, 
■^ych  judgment  was  reucrsed  by  the  last  Court  of  Asistants,  might  be  heard, 
&(3,  the  Court  graunts  his  request,  and  after  a  full  hearing  of  the  evidences 
produced  in  both  Courts,  together  w""  what  the  partjes  could  say,  the  Court 
found  for  the  plaintlfFe,  Capt  Clarke,  the  whole  some  mentioned  in  the  ver- 
dict of  y"^  jury  in  the  County  Court. 

The  Court,  having  pervsed  &  considered  of  seuerall  letters  &  a  coiiiission 
written  &-sigued  to  M"'  Nathaniell  Bacon,  Herbert  Pelham,  Rich  Saltonstall, 
Henry  Ashurst,  Es^J,  W  W"  Hooke,  M''  Jn°  Knowles,  &  M"'  Thomas  Allen, 
ministers  of  y'  gospell,  &c',  by  the  counsell,  doe  approove  thereof,  and  ordered 
a  letter  to  be  wrote  to  Richard  Saltonstall,  Es^,  from  this  Court,  signifying 
theire  acceptanc  &  allowance  of  the  councills  acts,  w*  are  in  y'  councills 
booke  at  large. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  M'  John  Elljott,  on  behalfe  of  the  poore  In- 
dians at  Naticke,  humbly  desiring  that  M"^  Bradstreetes  farme,  lately  lajd  out  to 
theire  pjudice,  may  be  considered,  &  themselves  releived,  and  that  a  coiaittee 
be  appointed  to  finish  the  laying  out  of  the  Indian  plantacon  at  Naticke 
bounds,  —  in  referenc  to  M'  Bradstreets  farme,  the  Court,  vpon  what  hath 
binn  alleadged  &  testified  by  M"^  Jackson  &  Left  Fisher,  judg  the  sajd  fiarme 
to  be  orderly  lajd  out,  and  doe  further  order,  that  Majo'  Atherton,  Capt 
Lusher,  Leftenn'  Clap,  Deacon  W'"  Parks,  or  any  two  of  them,  be  a  comittee 
impowercd  to  lay  out  convenient  bounds  to  Naticke,  out  of  the  coiiion  lands 
adjoyning,  and  are  also  desired  to  treate  with  Dedham,  and  compound  w"' 
them  for  such  lands  as  lye  adjoyning  to  y'^  sajd  place,  &  seemed  to  be  ueces- 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY  IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  36,3 

sary  for  the  Indians,  and  make  retourne  to  the  next  Court,  provided  the  coim-      16  58- 
try  be  put  to  no  chardg  of  stocke  thereby.  "^^     y       ' 

19  October. 

Wliipsufferage,  IQ'"  June,  1658. 

Tlie  coiliittee  appointed  by  the  Generall  Court  to  lay  out  a  plantation  of  Whipsuffcr.-ige 
sixe  thousand  acres  to  the  Indians  at  the  aboue  named  place,  hauing:  given  M'^  ^  T      , 

^  °  "  Indian  planta- 

Elliott  a  meeting  there,  and  duly  weighed  all  his  exceptions  (in  behalfe  of  the  tion. 
Indians)  against  what  hath  binn  formerly  acted  &  retourned  vnto  the  Court,  doe 
judg  meete,  in  way  of  compljanc,  that  the  bounds  of  the  Indian  plantation  be 
cnlardged  vnto  the  most  westerly  part  of  the  fence  that  now  standeth  on  the 
west  side  of  theire  planting  hill,  called  Ognoiukongquamcscit,  and  from  thence 
to  be  continewed  on  a  direct  north  lyne  vntill  they  haue  theire  full  quantitje  of 
sixe  thousand  acres ;  the  bounds  of  theire  plantation  in  all  other  respects  wee 
judge  meete  that  they  stand  as  in  our  former  retourne,  and  that  theire  full 
complement  of  meadow  by  Court  graunt  be  exactly  measured  out  by  an  *artist  [*299.] 
w"'in  the  Ijmitts  of  the  aboucsajd  Ijnes,  when  the  Indians,  or  any  in  theire 
behalfe,  are  willing  to  be  at  the  chardge  thereof,  provided  alwajes  that  the  In- 
dians may  haue  no  power  to  make  sale  or  alienation  of  all  or  any  part  of  theire 
aboue  sajd  graunt  otherwise  then  by  the  consent  &  approbation  of  the  honored 
Generall  Court,  and  that  when  any  sale  shall  happen,  the  plantacon  of  English 
there  setled  may  haue  the  first  tender  thereof  from  the  Court,  the  w''''  caution 
wee  the  rather  incert  because  not  only  a  considerable  part  of  the  neerest  & 
best  of  the  planting  land  is  heereby  taken  from  the  English,  but  (also  as  wee  Vide  pa.  225. 
are  informed)  this  north  Ijne  will  take  into  the  Indian  bound  the  neerest  and 
most  considerable  meadow,  by  estimation  about  one  hundi-ed  acres,  in  our 
place,  Vf'^^  tendeth  greately  to  the  pjudice  of  the  English  plantacon,  especially 
if  in  case  to  any  other  purpose  then  the  ends  proposed  for  the  accomodation 
of  the  Indians,  they  should  be  deprived  thereof 

ELIAZER   LUSHER, 
EDWARD   JACKSON, 
EPHRAIM   CHILD, 
THO:   DANFORTH. 

This  retourne  is  accepted  &  allowed  of  by  the  whole  Court. 

This  Court  is  dissolved. 


364  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1659.     Att  a    Generall    Court  of  Election,  held  at  Boston,  IP  of  May 

1659. 


11  May. 


was  chosen  Assistants  &  tooke  all  y"'"'  oaths, 
ex'  Cap?  Gookln. 
^  Majo''  Gen  &  Comissioner  for  Vnited  Col- 
lonyes. 


in  reserve. 
Tresurer. 


JN°  ENDECOTT,  Es^),  was  chosen  Govem%  &  tooke  his  oath. 
Kich  Bellingham,  Esqp,  was  chosen  Dep*  Govern^  &  tooke  his  oath. 
M""  Symon  Bradstreete,  &      I  Comissioner  for  United  Collonjes. 
M"^  Samuell  Symonds, 
Capt  Thomas  Wiggins, 
Cap?  Daniell  Gookin, 
Majo''  Daniell  Dennison,  & 
Majo"^  Symon  Willard, 
Majo''  Humphrey  Atlicrton, 
M--  Rich  Russell,  & 
M''  Tho  Danforth.  j 

M"^  Edw  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretaiy. 
Majo"^  Hauthorne  in  reserve  for  y"  collonys. 

Deputjes    retourned  from  y*  seuerall  tonnes  to    serve   at  this  General! 
Court  were,  — 

Salem  :  Maj:  W""  Hauthorne,  M"^  W'"  Browne. 
Charls  Toune :  Capt  Frauncis  Norton,  Left  Rich  Sprauge. 
Dorchester  :  Left  Roger  Clapp,  Ensigne  Hopestill  Foster.    • 
Boston  :  Capt  Tho  Savage,  M''  Anthony  Stoddard. 
Roxbuiy  :  W  Jn°  Johnson,  M"^  W""  Parks. 
Water  Toune  :  M^  Eplu-ajm  Child,  M"^  Charles  Chadwicke. 
Lynn  :  Capt  Tho  Marshall. 

Cambridg  :  M"^  Edw  Collins,  M"^  Edward  Oakes  at  2^  sessions. 
Ipswich :  Left  Jn°  Apleton,  M''  Georg  Giddings. 
Neubui-y  :  M'  Edward  Woodman. 
Weimouth :  John  Rogers. 

Hingham:  Capt  Joshua  Hubbard,    M'  Jeremiah  Houchin,  &    M""   Jn° 
Beales  for  2^  sessions. 

Concord :  Thomas  Brookes. 
Dedham  :   Capt  Eliazer  Lusher. 
Springfeild  :  Cap?  John  Pinchon. 
Salisbiuy  :  Lef?  Rofct  Pike. 
Hampton :  Lef?  Christopher  Hussye. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  365 


11  May. 


Kowley :  Maximillian  Jewett.  ^___. 

Braintry :  M'  Samuell  Basse. 
Douer  :  Cap?  Rich  Waldern. 
Woobomne :  Cap?  Edwaid  Johnson. 
Meadfeild :  Henry  Addams. 
Kittery  :  M''  Humphrey  Chadbourne. 
Scarborough :  M''  Edward  Rushworth. 
Saco :  Robert  Booth. 

Cap?  Thomas  Savage  was  chosen  Speaker  for  y'  sessions,  &  2  sessions 
also. 

*For  the  avoyding  of  all  future  inconvenjencjes  referring  to  the  setling      [*300.] 
of  poore  people  that  may  neede  releife  from  the  place  where  they  dwell,  itt  is  °^';';^'_''''""S 
ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  where  any  person,  w'" 
his  family,  or  in  case  he  hath  no  family,  shall  be  resident  in  any  toune  or 
peculjar  of  this  jurisdiccon  for  more  then  three  moneths  w«>out  notice  given  to 
such  person  or  persons  by  the  connstable,  or  one  of  the  selectmen  of  the  sajd 
place,  or  theire  order,  that  the  toune  is  not  willing  that  they  should  rcmajut- 
as  an  inhabitant  amongst  them,  and  in  case,  after  such  notice  given,  such  person 
or  persons  shall  notw"'standing  remajue  in  the  sajd  place,  if  the  selectmen  of 
the  sajd  place  shall  not,  by  way  of  complaint,  petition  the  next  Coimty  Court 
of  that  shicre  for  releife  in  the  sajd  case,  &  the  same  prosecuted  to  effect,  euery 
such   person  or  persons   (as  the   case  may  req^uire)  shall  be  provided  for  & 
releived,  in  case  of  necessity,  by  the  inhabitants  of   the  sajd   place  where 
he  or  she  is  so  found.     And  it  is  further  ordered,  that  each  County  Court 
shall  from  tjme  to  tjme  hcare  &  determine  all  complaints  of  this  nature,  and 
setle  all  poore  persons,  according  to  directions  of  this  lawe,  in  any  toune  or 
peculiar  w"'in  this  colony,  and  eueiy  such  person  or  persons  shall  accordingly 
be  entertayned  &  provided  for  by  the   selectmen  or  connstable  of   the  sajd 
place,  at  a  toune  charge  ;  and  in  case  any  toune  or  peculjar  shall  fiude  them- 
selves agreived  at  such  dispose  of  the  County  Court,  they  may  appeale  to  the 
next  Court  of  Asistants ;  and  where  any  person  or  persons  cannot  according 
to  this  lawe  be  setled  in  any  toune  or  peculiar,  they  shall  then  be  placed  in 
any  toune  of  that  county  wherein  they  are  found,  according  as  the  County 
Court  shall  appointe,  and  theire  charges  sattisfied  vnto  them  by  the  county 
Tresurer. 

Whereas,  by  experience,  it  is  found  that  great  damage  is  sustejned  to  the  p,°°ns  attached 
estates  of  soimdiy,  whose  persons  &  estates  are  attached  to  be  responsible  in  ™''.™°"*  ''^' 
civill  actions,  by  reason    that  execution  is   delayed   after   that  judgment  is  released,  &c. 


366 

1659. 

t 

11  May. 

[•301.] 

Troopers  pccn- 
alty. 


County  Tres- 
urers  power  to 
sell  p'sons 
fined,  &c. 


Pouder  to  be 

provided. 

Pa?nalty  for 
keeping  Christ- 
mas. 


Pcenalty  for 
playing  at 
cards  &  dice. 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

graunted,  —  for  redresse  whereof,  it  is  ordered  by  this  Court  &  the  authoritje 
thereof,  that  henceforth  in  all  civill  proceedings,  (excepting  cases  where  the 
defendant  is  a  strainger,)  where  execution  is  not  taken  out  and  executed  w"'iu 
one  moueth  after  that  judgment  is  graunted,  all  such  attachments,  whither  on 
persons  or  estates,  w""  suretjes,  shallbe  released  &  voyd  in  lawe,  any  lawe, 
vsage,  or  custome  to  the  contrary  notw"'standing,  vnlesse  the  Court  that 
graunted  the  judgment  shall  see  cause  to  give  further  tjme  &  respitt  of 
execution  in  any  particcular  case. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  officers  of  the  seuerall  troopes,  it  is  ordered, 
that  no  trooper  put  off  or  chainge  his  horse  w"'out  leave  from  his  coinauder, 
vnder  the  pocnalty  of  fine  pounds  ;  &  that  for  non  appearance  on  dayes  of  excer- 
cise  the  fine  shallbe  teun  shillings  ;  and  that  no  trooper,  being  listed,  may  at 
his  pleasme  disband  himself  w*out  leaue  orderly  obtayncd  from  his  coiiiander, 
and  retourned  by  certifficat  to  the  coiuander  of  the  ffoote  in  the  toune  to 
which  they  belong,  vnder  pcenalty  of  such  a  fine  as  his  cheife  officer  shall 
impose,  not  exceeding  fiffty  shillings. 

Whereas  Daniell  and  Provided  Southwicke,  sonne  &  daughter  to  Law- 
rence Southwicke,  haue  binn  fyned  by  the  County  Courts  at  Salem  &  Ipswich, 
^tending  they  haue  no  estates,  resolving  not  to  worke,  and  others  likewise 
haue  binn  fyned,  &  more  like  to  be  fyned,  for  siding  w"^  the  Quakers  &,  ab- 
senting themselves  from  the  publicke  ordinances,  —  in  ans'  to  a  quEEstiou,  what 
course  shallbe  taken  for  the  sattisfaction  of  the  fines,  the  Court,  on  pervsall 
of  the  lawe,  title  Arrests,  resolve,  that  the  Tresurers  of  the  seuerall  countjes 
are  and  shall  hereby  be  impowred  to  sell  the  sajd  persons  to  any  of  the 
English  nation  at  Virginia  or  Barbadoes. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  country  Tresurer  doe  provide  seven  or  eight  bar- 
rclls  of  pouder  every  yeare  out  of  the  custome  of  wines,  or  other  wajes. 

For  ^venting  disorders  arising  in  seuerall  places  w"'in  this  jurisdiccon, 
by  reason  of  some  still  observing  such  fiestiualls  as  were  superstitiously  kept 
in  other  countrys,  to  the  great  dishonnor  of  God  &  offence  of  others,  it  is 
therefore  ordered  by  this  Court  and  the  authority  thereof,  that  whosoeuer 
shall  be  found  observing  any  such  day  as  Christmas  or  the  like,  either  by  for- 
bearing of  labour,  feasting,  or  any  other  way,  vpon  any  such  accounts  as  afore- 
sajd,  euery  such  person  so  offending  shall  pay  for  eueiy  such  offence  fine  shil- 
lings, as  a  fine  to  the  county.  And  whereas,  not  only  at  such  tjmes,  but  at 
seuerall  other  tjmes  also,  it  is  a  custome  too  frequent  in  many  places  to  ex- 
pend time  in  vnlawfull  games,  as  cards,  dice,  &c^,  it  is  therefore  further  or- 
dered, and  by  this  Court  declared,  that,  after  publication  hereof,  whosoeuer 
shall  be  found  in  any  place  w^in  this  jurisdiccSn  playing  either  at  cai'ds  or  at 


THE    MAlSSACHUSETTrf    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  367 

dice,  contrary  to  this  order,  shall  pay  as  a  fine  to  the  county  the  soiiie  of  fine      1  G  5  9. 
shillings  for  eQy  such  offence.  "< 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Lawrence  Southwicke,  Cassandra,  his  wife,  Samuell  „    . , 
Shattock,  Nicholas  Phelps,  Joshua  Bufflim,  &  Josiah  Southwicke  hereby  arc  "f  Qu.ikers 

of  ya  jnrisdic- 

sentenced,  according  to  the  order  of  the  Generall  Court  in  October  last,  to  c,m,  &beco-' 
bannishment,  to  depart  out  of  this  jurisdiction  by  the  eighth  of  June  next,  on  "".  '^    «  cosa 
payne  of  death ;  and  if  any  of  them,  after  the  sajd  *eighth  day  of  June  next,      [*302.'| 
shall  be  found  w"'iu  this  jurisdiccon,  they  shall  ^  ap^hended  by  any  conn- 
stuble  or  other  officer,  there  to  lye  till  the  next  Court  of  Asistants,  where  they 
shall  be  trjed,  &  being  found  guilty  of  the  breach  of  this  lawe,  shall  be  put 
to  death. 

Vpon  information  given  to  this  Court  of  great  damage  accruing  both  to  mer-  Salt  to  be 
chants  &  others,  by  reason  no  meete  persons  are  appointed  to  measure  salt  from 
such  shipps  as  arrive  in  our  seuerall  harbours,  this  Court  doth  therefore  order  & 
enact,  that  there  shall  be  in  euery  marityne  toune  w'^'in  this  jurisdiction  one 
meete  person  appointed  by  the  toune  from  tjmc  to  tjme,  who  shall  diligently 
attend  this  service  vpon  due  notice  given  by  either  party  concerned  therein,  & 
the  same  truly  &  faithfully  to  discliardg  ;  for  which  he  shall  be  allowed  tliree 
halfe  pence  for  euery  hogshead,  the  one  halfe  to  be  pajd  by  the  buyer,  the 
other  halfe  by  the  seller  ;  &  what  master  of  shipps  or  other  vessell,  or  mar- 
chant,  shall  faile  in  the  observation  of  this  order,  he  or  they  shall  forfeict  to 
the  conntrje  two  shillings  for  euery  toune  so  disposed  of,  vnlesse  the  partjes 
shall  otherwise  agree. 

Whereas,  in  the  order  directing  for  the  making  of  the  country  levy,  ewes  Prize  of  ewe 
are  to  be  valued  at  twenty  fine  shillings  apeece,  which  is  farre  aboue  theire  ^ J'j^Jtg"  '^°"" 
true  worth,  it  is  therefore  ordered    &    hereby  declared,  that  henceforth  all 
ewes  shall  be  valued,  in  making  the  country  rate,  only  at  fifteene  shillings  a 
peece,  any  lawe  ^  custome  to  the  contrary  notw^'standing. 

This  Court,  taking  into  theire  serjous  consideration  the  present  vnsetled  Day  of  hunuli- 
estate  &  condicon  of  our  brethren  in  our  native  countrje,  by  coiuotions  &  great 
thoughts  of  heart,  both  in  countrje  »&  Parljament,  now  assembled,  a  good  issue 
whereof  doth  wholly  depend  vpon  the  Lords  favor  &  goodnes  towards  tliem, 
as  also  the  Lords  frownes  vpon  ourselves  by  the  irreparable  rents  &  divissions 
in  sundry  churches,  the  great  security  &  sensuallity  vnder  oiu-  present  in- 
joyments,  the  sad  face  on  the  rising  generation,  together  w*  threats  of  future 
evills  in  this  present  spring  season,  all  w"*"  are  signes  of  the  Lords  displeasiu'e 
for  our  w"'drawing  from  him,  doe  therefore  coinend  the  15"^  day  of  June  next 
to  be  kept  by  all  the  people  of  this  jurisdiccon  a  solemne  day  of  humiliation 
for  the  imploring  of  Gods  favorable  presence  yett  to  abide  w""  our  dcare  natiue 


368  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  5  9.      country,  &  w"'  vs  his  poore  people  &  churches  iu  the  ends  of  the  earth,  & 
"^       ''    w"*  our  seede  after  vs. 
.         ^.     ,  There  is  a  farme  siraunted  to  a  particcular  person  some  yeares  asfon.    This 

A  quccstion  de-  ~  r  i  j  o 

sired  to  be  re-    ffiuine,  after  pajnes,  travell,  &  cost,  is  layd  out  betweeuc  two  tounes,  fFarre  off 

solved  by  y"  , 

Court  in  reffer-  from  either  of  them.  The  graimtee  being  encouraged  by  the  neerest  neigh- 
arme.  -^^^.^  ^^  £j.gg  from  either  tounes  wherevfjon  the  sajd  fiirme  is  lajd  out,  &  pos- 
session taken,  retoumed  into  this  Court,  &  confirmed  as  appearetli  vpon. 
Now,  after  the  neglect  of  twelve  or  sixteene  yeares,  this  last  winter  one  of  the 
sajd  tounes  caused  theire  Ijne,  by  a  compasse,  to  be  actually  marked  out,  it 
being  agreed  many  yeares  agonne  by  coiiiissioners  vpon  what  points  of  the 
compasse  it  should  runne,  and  by  this  act  they  haue  taken  into  theire  toune- 
ship  much  of  this  farme.  Now,  the  quaestion  is,  to  whom  the  propriety  be- 
longeth  of  the  sajd  farme,  whither  to  the  toune  or  to  the  particcular  person. 
The  Court  resolved  that  the  propriety  of  the  sajd  farme  belongeth  to  the 
particcular  person. 
[*303.]  *Whereas  it  hath  appeared  to  this  Court,  that  according  to  a  former  graunt 

orwa  uc  e     ^^  Capt  John  Cullicke  &  M"'  William  Goodwyn,  in  behalfe  of  themselves  and 

plantation  to  ^  ^  j     ^ 

be  lajd  out.       ffieinds  that  desired  to  remoove  into  our  colony,  they  haue  begunne  to  remoove 

28: 3  mo.,  59.  ^.^  in,  n    c       -i-  i  i      '  i        •    •  i 

to  JN  orwoottucke  w"*  seuerall  lamiljes,  and  made  some  begnnng  on  the  east 

side  the  riuer  in  order    to    a  plantacon,  and  that  there  are  many  desirable 

psons  hauing  a  pastor  w""  his  church  engaged  to  goe  along  w'''  them,  w*** 

another  who  may  in  tjme  be  joyned  to  that  church  for  theire  further  helpe  in 

the  worke  of  the  ministry,  whereby  they  are  enabled  not  only  to  carry  on  a 

toune,  but  church  worke  also,  —  this  Court,  being  willing  to  remoove   all 

obstacles  out  of  theire  way,  and  finding  the  people  so  many  and  considerable 

Vide  pa.  374,     that  haue  engaged,  w"'  seuerall  others  that  would  engage  if  there  might  be  en- 
723 

couragement  found  there  for  them,  doe  order,  that  these  persons  fFollowing,viz., 
Capt  Pinchon,  Left  Holyhoke,  Deacon  Chapin,  Willjam  Holtou,  &  Eichard 
Lyman,  shall  be  a  coiiiittee  fully  impowered  by  this  Court  to  lay  out  the 
boimds  of  the  toune  at  Norwottocke,  on  either  or  both  sides  the  riuer  as 
they  shall  see  cause,  so  as  shall  be  most  suitable  for  the  chohabitation  and  full 
supply  of  those  people,  that  this  wildernes  may  be  populated  and  the  majne 
ends  of  our  coming  into  these  parts  may  be  promoted.  Voted  by  the  whole 
Court  mett  together. 
Boston  corpo-  In  ans'  to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Boston,  referring  to  a  corporation, 

the  Coiut  judgoth  it  meete  to  graunt  them  liberty  to  consult  and  advise 
amongst  themselves  what  may  be  necessary  for  such  an  end,  and  the  same  to 
drawe  vp  into  a  forme,  &  present  the  same  to  the  next  session,  to  be  allowed 
if  they  shall  sec  cause. 


ration. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  369 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Edmond  Rice,  the  Coiu-t  judgeth  it  meete  to      16  59. 
graunt  his  request,  viz.,  a  parcell  of  meadow  ahout  thirty  acres,  &  a  parcell    '^^^^ 
of  vpland  about  fiffty  acres,  both  parcells  not  exceeding  eighty  acres,  as  it  j^^^,  ^^  j,^. 
lyeth  on  the  south  side  of  the  path  that  leadeth  from  Sudbury  to  Conecticot,  -^.f^-^^'^ 
about  six  miles  from  Sudbury,  &  order  Ensigne  Nojes  &  John  Stone  to  lay 

it  out  vnto  him. 

In  ans-  to  the  peticon  of  W"  Russell,  humbly  desiring  the  remittment  Ans-toW- 

ill   """  1  o  T         Russells  peti- 

of  those  fines  the  law  imposeth  on  him  for  his  selling  strong  waters  &  trading  j„„. 
for  furrs,  the  Court,  being  informed  of  the  ingenuitje  of  the  offender  in  his 
ready  acknowledgment  of  his  offenc,  &  that  he  did  ignorantly,  judge  meete  to 
remitt  the  fines  imposed  to  sixe  pounds,  &  order  the  strong  waters  to  be  re- 
tourned  to  the  peticoner,  &  the  beaver  to  the  Indian. 

The  Court,  being  sattisfied  of  the  reality  of  the  sale  of  a  parcell  of  land  Ans-^to  Tho. 
mentioned  in  a  draught  of  a  bill  of  sale  presented  to  this  Court,  &  is  on  file,  pe'LTn. 
doc  judge  meete  to  impower  Mary  Glouer,  the  administratrix  &  reUct  of  M' 
Nath  Glouer,  to  make  &  signe  a  legal  deede  &  conveyance  of  the  sajd  land 
vnto  Thomas  Dauenport,  his  heires  &  assignes. 

In  ans'  to  the  request  of  y^  troopers  lately  raised  in  y^  countys  of  Essex,  Edw.Hutchm- 

_,  son  capt.  of  a 

Suffoxke,  &  Midlesex,  for  y«  Courts  confirmation  of  theire  officers,  the  Court  troope  of  horse. 
judgeth  it   meete  to    allowe  &  confii-me  Edward  Hutchinson  to  be  theire 

captajne. 

In  ans^  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Brakett,  of  Salem,  humbly  acknowledg-,  ^-'^t;^Brock- 
ing  his  being  di-awne  away  by  those  called  Quakers  from  the  good  ordinances 
of  God  here  estabUshed,  &  to  too  often  to  meete  &  joyn  w'^  those  ill  affected 
persons,  to  y"  dishonnor  of  God,  troubled  this  comonweaUh,  &  wound  & 
greife  to  his  wife,  family,  &  conscienc,  for  w^"  he  desires  to  be  humbled,  the 
Court,  on  his  request,  judgeth  it  meete  to  abate  the  peticoner  the  one  halfe  of 
his  fine,  &  referr  the  other  halfe  to  the  consideration  of  the  next  County  Court 

at  Salem. 

*The  buisnes  respecting  M^  Edward  Lane  &  ]\I™  Anna  Keajne,  Sen,  being      [*304.] 
referd  to  the  consideration  of  a  co.nittee,  to  be  indifferently  chosen  by  them-  ^!^J^^ 
selves,  W^"  M"  Keayne,  Sen,  not  consenting  to,  the  Court  judged  it  meete  to  Keaj-ne. 
proceede  to  nominate  the  sajd  coiulttce,  &  doe  appoint  M'  Richard  Russell,  M^ 
Edward  Collins,  Capt  Eliazer  Lusher,  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  &  Capt  W-  Dauis 
a  coinittce  to  act  in  the  case,  according  to  the  Coiuts  order  &  instrucoons, 
w^h  is  as  foil:  Instructions  from  the  Generall  Court  to  the  gen"'  appointed  to 
act  as  a  coralttee  in  the  case  depending  betweene  W  Edward  Lane  &  M" 
Anna  Keayne,  Sen,  of  Boston,  as  follows  :  Yow,  or  the  major  part  of  yow,  are 
hereby  authorized  and  impowered  by  this  Court  to  assemble  y^selves  together 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  47 


370 


THE  REOOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


28  May. 


1659.  at  Boston  the  twentieth  day  of  July  next,  then  &  there  to  consider  of  all  such 
things  as  shall  be  necessaiy  for  the  dischardge  of  the  trust  comitted  to  yow  by 
the  Court,  referring  to  the  case  aboue  mentioned,  viz',  to  call  for  Capt  Robert 
Keaynes  will  &  inventory,  together  w"»  what  writtings,  contracts,  evidences, 
&<3,  haue  from  tjme  to  tjnie  binn  made  betweene  the  partjes  aforesajd,  as  also 
by  warrant,  if  neede  if  necde  be,  to  call  for  both  parties,  &  such  wittnesses  as 
cann  testify  in  the  case,  &  the  sajd  wittnesses  to  examine,  vpon  oath,  in  any 
thing  w"''  yow  shall  see  necessary  herein,  &  to  yo''  vttermost  power  &  endcav- 
o''s  to  make  a  loving  &  amicable  agreement,  if  it  may  be,  to  mutual  sattis- 
faction  of  the  sajd  M''  Lane  &  M'*  Anna  Keajne,  thereby  to  prevent  further 
trouble  to  this  Court,  or,  if  otherwise,  to  prepare  the  case,  so  farre  as  yow  cann, 
for  a  further  hearing,  &  to  make  a  true  representation  of  the  same  to  y""  next 
session  of  this  Court. 


Marshall 
WajtesSOO 
ac's  layd  out. 


M'  Russells 
600  ac'8  lajd 
out. 


Decemtj,  1658. 

Layd  out  vnto  Richard  Wajte,  marshall,  three  hundred  acres  of  land  in 

the  wildernes,  betweene  Chochittuate  &  Nipnop,  in  manner  following,  viz', 

there  being  a  necke  of  land  about  two  hundred  &  t'i'lenty  acres,  more  or  lesse, 

&  is  surrounded  w"'  Sudbury  Riuer,  a   great  pond,  &  a   smale   brooke   that 

runneth  from  the  sajd  pond  into  the  riuer,  &  from  the  southerly  end  of  the 

sajd  pond,  runing  to  the  riuer  againe  by  a  westerly  Ijne,  according  to  marked 

trees,  &  on  the  westerly  side  of  Sudbury  Riuer  to  extend  his  bounds  from  the 

sajd  riuer,  twenty  pole  in  breadth,  so  farre  in  length  as  his  land  Ijeth  against 

the  sajd  riuer ;  also,  on  the  northerly  &  north  east  of  the  sajd  brooke  &  pond 

he   hath   fine  patches  of  meadow,   contejiiing   about   twenty  acres,  more   or 

lesse,  being  all  surrounded  with  wildernes  land ;  also,  on  the  north  east  side 

of  Washakam  Ponds  he  hath  sixty  acres,  being  bounded  w"*  the  sajd  pond  on 

the  southwest,  and  an  Indian  bridge  on  the  east,  &  elswhere,  by  marked  trees, 

the  wildernes  siuTounding.     By  order  of  the  General  Court,  held  at  Boston, 

October  20'",  1658. 

THOMAS  DANFORTH, 

ANDREW  BELCHAR. 

The  Court  alloweth  &  approweth  of  this  retourne. 

The  6">  of  May,  1659. 
Lajd  out  vnto  M''  Richard  Russell,  Tresurer,  flue  hundred  acres  of  land, 
lying  in  the  wildernes,  vpon  both  sides  of  the  path  that  leadeth  from  Siidbury 
toward  Nipnop,  &  is  bounded  ou  the  north  east  w"^  Washakam  Pond  and  a 
swampe  adjoyning  thereto,  and  on  the  west  by  a  marked  tree,  &  the  west  side 
of  an  ashen   swampe,  and   on   the   south  with   the  vpland  adjoyning  to  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  37X 

southerly  or  southwest  point  of  that  meadow  w'^''  Ijcth  on  the  westerly  side 
of  the  aforcsajd  meadow,  and  on  the  north,  extending  on  the  north  side  of 
the  aforesajd  path,  and  is  surrounded  w"^  the  midcrncs. 

EDMOND  RICE, 
THO:  NOJES. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approoves  of  this  retourne. 

*In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Samuell  GofFe,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to      [*305.] 
referre  the  examination  of  the  case,  according  to  lawe,  to  the  next  County  Ans-  to  Sam. 
Court,  to  he  held  in  Midlesex,  that  dew  notice  be  giuen  for  that  end  to  the    °  ^^  ''^'"'°"' 
pai-tjes  concerned. 

Whereas  the  Geuerall  Court,  in  October  last,  for  the  reasons  mentioned  in  Brends  censure 
the  order  then  made,  for  the  preventing  of  those  evills  which  the  cursed  "^  ''^"'''''""''t- 
Quakers  in  theire  principles  &  practises  are  apt  to  produce  in  those  places 
where  they  come,  did  order,  y'  all  such  persons  (not  being  of  the  inhabitants 
of  this  jurisdiccon)  that  are  of  the  cursed  sect  of  the  Quakers,  who  haue  at 
any  time  suffered  what  the  lawes  of  this  jurisdiccon  from  tjme  to  tjme  haue 
provided  ag'  such  persons  againe  ariving  in. any  parte  of  this  jurisdiccon, 
should  be  seazed  on  &  coiuitted  to  close  prison,  there  to  continew  till  the  next 
Court  of  Asistauts,  when  he  or  they  shall  be  sentenced  to  banishment,  on  pajne 
of  death.  And  whereas  W"  Brend,  a  knoune  Quaker,  that  hath  formerly 
suffered  the  lawe,  hath,  notw'hstanding  the  aboue  mentioned  lawes,  come  into 
this  jurisdiccon,  being  sent  to  prison  &  appearing  before  the  Court,  acknowl- 
edged himself  to  be  one  of  those  the  world,  in  scorue,  called  Quakers,  this 
Court  doth  therefore  order,  that  the  sajd  W™  Brend  be  comitted  to  prison, 
there  to  remajne  till  the  sixteenth  of  this  instant  May,  &  then  be  dischardged 
the  prison,  &  shall  depart  tliis  jurisdiccon,  on  pajne  of  death,  and  that  if  after 
the  eighteenth-  of  this  instant  May  he  shall  be  found  w'^in  any  part  of  this 
jurisdiccon,  he  shall  be  app>hended  &  coiuitted  to  prison  till  he  be  proceeded 
w""  accordin2:  to  lawe. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Robert  Locke,  humbly  craning  the  remittment  Ans'  to  M' 
of  a  fine  of  tenn  pounds  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court  at  Boston  for  ^""^^  ^®"°' 
throwing  ballast  oner  board  in  the  channell,  w"^"^  was  donne  by  his  men  con- 
trary to  his  comand,  &S,  the  Court,  finding  that  allegations  of  the  peticoner  is 
reall,  as  appeares  by  proofe,  judge  meete  to  abat  the  peticoner  eight  pounds 
of  his  sajd  fine. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Benjamin  Gillham,  humbly  craving  the  favo""  Ans'  to  Benj. 
of  this  Court  that  his  wife  might  be  borne  w^all  respecting  hir  absenting  hii-  ?'"'"^  ^^^' 
self  from  y"  publicke  assembly s,  &6,  being  otherwise  peaceable,  &d,  the  Court 


372 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


Ans'  to  Sher- 
man &  Win- 
colls  peticon. 


Courts  ans'  to 
Northampton 
peticons. 


judgeth  it  not  meete  to  graunt  his  request,  but  doe  order,  y*  for  tjme  to  come 
wheneuer  the  peticoner  shall  make  it  evident  by  good  proofe  y'  by  weaknes 
of  body,  or  other  sufficjent  reasons,  to  the  County  Court,  that  his  wife  could 
not  come  to  the  ordjuances,  the  County  Court,  they  doubt  not,  are  &  will 
be  ready  (w"^"^  is  the  mindc  of  this  Coui-t  they  should  so  firre)  to  free  the 
petitioner  from  mulcts  in  such  kind  &  case. 

In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  John  Sherman  &  John  Wincoll,  guardians 
to  John  Fleming,  the  Court  judgeth  it  not  meete  to  alter  the  act  of  the  Coun- 
ty Court  in  referenc  to  the  divission  of  the  sajd  Flemings  fathers  estate. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticons  of  the  inhabitants  of  Northampton,  this  Court 
doth  order,  that  Willjam  Holton,  Arthur  Willjams,  &  Richard  Lyman  to  end 
smale  causes  there  for  a  yeare,  and  that  Joseph  Parsons  &  Thomas  Roote, 
joyned  w*  them,  be  theire  select  men,  and  that  James  Bridgman  be  connsta- 
ble  ;  and  for  that  part  of  theire  petition  desiring  the  encouragement  of  M' 
Mather,  the  Court  declares  themselves  ready  to  consider  of  what  they  shall 
ppound  ;  and  in  relation  to  theire  carrying  on  the  duty  of  the  Saboath  in  M' 
Mathers  absenc,  wherein  the  doe  so  much  disagree,  that  though  in  some  cases 
private  men  may  excercise  theire  guifts,  where  there  are  such  as  are  knoune, 
able,  approoved,  &  Orthodoxe,  yet  for  present,  as  things  as  are  circumstanced  w"* 
them,  the  Court  judgeth  it  theire  best,  safest,  &  most  peaceable  way,  in  the  ab- 
sence of  theire  minister,  to  assemble  all  at  one  place,  &  to  spend  the  Saboath 
together,  besides  praying  &  singing,  in  reading  &  repeating  of  knoune  godly, 
Orthodoxe  bookes  &  sermons. 


[*306.] 

Cap'  Daven- 
ports farrae 
lajd  out. 


*The  bounds  of  Richard  Davenporte  his  farme. 

Lajd  out  in  the  yeare  sixteene  hundred  fifty  &  eight,  according  to  the 
order  &  graunt  of  the  Generall  Co  art  of  the  ilassachusetts  in  America,  being 
measured  in  the  presence  of  the  comittee,  John  Prescot  &  Jonas  Fairebancks, 
in  manner  following :  First,  begining  at  a  great  white  oake,  being  in  the  south 
Ijne  of  Lancaster  bounds,  -w"^^  sajd  oake  being  three  quarters  of  one  mile  & 
forty  perches  to  the  eastward  of  Lancaster,  southwest  angle,  runing,  wee  say, 
vpon  a  west  northwest  pointe,  one  hundred  &  seventy  rods,  then  making  an 
angle  runing  vpon  a  west  &  be  north  point  one  mile  one  quarter  and  sev- 
enty fine  rods,  there  making  a  right  angle,  passing  ouer  the  riuer,  runing  a 
Ijne  fiffty  rods  in  length,  there  making  an  angle  &  ruiiing  south  east  &  by 
south  one  mile  &  one  bundred  &  twenty  rod,  there  making  an  angle  at  a  great 
pine  tree,  &  ruiiing  from  thence  north  east  &  be  east  one  mile  &  eighty  rods, 
w'^''  Ijne  periods  at  the  white  oake  where  wee  first  beganne,  all  w''''  Ijnes  so 
draune  out  conteines  sixe  hundred  acres ;  and  also  layd  out  flEffty  acres  more. 


THE    MASSACUUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND,  373 

TV*''  sajd  fiffty  acres  is  part  of  the  farme  grauntecl  to  Cap?  Davenport,  &  lycth      165  9. 
a  mile  distant  £i-om  the  northwest  angle  of  the  aforeSd  farme.  "       '       "" 

28  May. 

JOHN  PEESCOTT, 
JONAS  FAIEEBANCKS. 

The  Court  approoves  of  this  retoume. 

Whereas  retourne  was  made   to   this  Court   by  M'  Ephraim  Child,  M''  Courts  mind 
Edw  Oake,  &  Robert  Hale,  in  relation  to  y«  composing  y^  differenc  at  Woo-  johiisoir& 
borne  betweene  Capt  Edw  Johnson,  Ensigne  Carter,  Tho  Dutton,  &c,  ab'land  Ensign  Carter 
Vi'^^  is  on  file,  this  Court,  on  pervsall  thereof,  judge  meete  ^  the  determination 
of  that  buisnes,  together  w"'  the  chardges,  to  the  coiiiittee  againe. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  John  Cheekly,  attourney  to  Thomas  Ancor,  &  Ans'  to  Chock- 
James  Neighbor,  &  John  Andrews,  coop"'s,  assignes  vnto  George  Palmer,  hum-  p^t-jon'^ 
bly  craving,  that  having  obtajned  seuerall  judgments  agt  the  estate  of  the  late 
Walter  Meri-y,  wliich  being  extended  on  a  house,  the  sajd  house  may  be 
aequally  valued  or  sold  at  an  outcrje,  that  so  they  may  haue  theire  due  debts, 
the  Court  judgeth  it  meete,  that  the  peticoners  doe  attend  a  legall  proceeding 
for  the  issue  of  theire  respective  cases  menconed  in  theire  petition. 

Layd  out  vnto  the  honnored  Goflno"^,  John  Endecott,  Esq^,  fiue  hundred  &    2J  (2),  1659. 
fifty  acres  of  laud  on  Ipswich  Riuer,  and  is  bounded  w"^  a  brooke  anent  Goodma  ,  °',  "^'''*  •"^™'' 

^  r  '  lajd  out  &  al- 

Goolds  land  on  the  east.  Blind  Hole  on  south,  and  the  wildernes  else  where  lowed, 
sxu'rounding  the   sajd  farme,   taking    into    the  bounds   thereof   the   swampy      (jj^  ^j  j^^^ 
meadow  land  that  Ijeth  on  the  south  side  of  the  riuer.  of  lands. 

By  order  of  the  Generall  Court. 

THO:   DANFORTH, 
ROBERT   PIALE. 

The  Court  approoves  of  the  retourne  of  these  coiiilssiouers. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Thomas  Sauage,  Capt  Frauncis  Norton,  &  M'  Comittee  to 
Anthony  Stoddard  be  &  hereby  are  appointed  a  comittee  to  take  the  Tresurers  u,sacco' 
acco'  sometjmes  betweene  this  &  the  next  session  of  this  Court,  &  to  make 
theire  i-etourne  to  this  Court  in  October  next. 

Wee,  whose  names  are  vnder  written,  being  appointed  by  y°  Generall  Bounds  of 
Court  to  pitch  &  lay  out  the  dividing  Ijne  betweene  the  tounes  of  Yorke  &  -^y^.y^ 
Wells  from  a  marked  tree  formerly  marked  by  mutuall  consent  of  both  tounes, 
&  according  to  our  power  given  vs,  haue  determined  as  followeth :  to  say,  the 
dividing  Ijne  shall  runne  betweene  the  two  aforesajd  tounes  from  the  abouesajd 


374  THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

marked  tree  vp  into  the  countrje,  on  a  streight  Ijne  vnto  the  south  west  side 
of  certajne  marshes  coiuonly  called  Totneck  Marshes,  directly  against  the  a 
certajne  rocke  on  the  north  east  side  of  the  sajd  marshes,  deviding  the  tounes 
of  Kittery  &  Wells.     Dated  y"  27"^  (1)  &,  58,  59. 

NICHO:    SHAPLEIGH, 
BRJAN  PENDLETON, 

marke 

NICCOLAS    INF   FROSTE. 

The  Court  allows  of  this  retourne. 

[*307.]      ■         *In  ans"'  to  the  petition  of  Capt  W""  Hauthorne,  Capt  Tho  Sauage,  M""  W" 
Newpiantacon  Payne,  M"'  W™  Brounc,  Capt  Tho  Clarke,  Capt  Frauncis  Norton,  Capt  John 

to  Cap'  Hau- 
thorne, Pinchon,  M'  George  Corwin,  M'  John  Richards,  JSI"-  Tho  Lake,  &  M"^  Walter 

auage,    c.      Pj-Jcg^  i\iq  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  them  a  plantation  of  tenn  miles 

square,  about  forty  or  fiffty  miles  from  Springfeild  to  the  westward,  about 

two  thirds  of  the  way  to  Fort  Awrania,  so  as  they  beginne  it  in  eighteene 

moneths. 

Ans'to  In  ans'^  to  the  peticon  of  the  selectmen  of  Chelmsford,  the  Court  judgeth 

e  ms  or         .        g  (^     j     order  that  the  selectmen  of  Chelmsford,   together  w"'  those  y' 

peticon  ab'  y«  '        o  j 

bridge.  couenantcd  to  build  the  bridge,  doe  forthwith  take  speedy  &  effectuall  care  for 

repajring  &  finishing  of  the  sajd  bridge,  and  that  they  present  a  bill  of  chardg 

for  the  same  to  the  next  Court  of  y'  shcire,  who  are  to  examine  the  cause  of 

the  damage  susteined,  &  levy  the  same  according  as  they  shall  finde  to  be  just 

&  aequall,  and  to  take  further  order  in  y''  case  as  they  shall  finde  needfull. 

FurbursbiUof  W™  Furbur,  plaintifFe,  ag'  John  Garland,  defendant,  in  an  accon  that  by 

course  of  lawe  came  to  this  Court,  the  ]\Iagis'^  not  agreeing  to  the  verdict  of 

the  jury  at  Salisbury  Court,  y^  sajd  Furber  appearing,  &  Garland,  being  three 

tjmes  called,  not  appearing,  the  Court  graunted  the  sajd  Furburs  bill  of  costs, 

i.  e.,  forty  sixe  shillings. 

Godfrys  bill  of  In  the  action  brought  to  this  Court  from  the  County  Court  at  Salisbury 

costs,  3"  U"  8.   jj_^jg  |,^g|.  ^pj.^^  betweene  John  Godfry,  plaintiflTe,  and  Abraham  Whittacre, 

defendant,  on  the  Courts  pervsall  &  consideration  of  the  evidences  produced 

in  the  case,  the  Court  reuerced  the  virdict  of  the  jury  at  Salisbury  Courts 

case,  &  find  for  the  plaintiffe  costs  of  Court  three  pounds  eleven  shillings  & 

eight  pence. 

M'  Webbs  bill  In  the  action  brought  to  this  Court  by  Samucll  Archard,  John  Hauthorne, 

of  costs,  2".      ^  Samuel  Bennct,   plaintiffs,  ag'    Henry  Webb,    defendant,    the    Court,  on 

pervsall  &  examinati  of  the  evidences  produced  on  both  sides,  doe  finde  for 

the  defendant  costs  of  Court,  i.  e.,  forty  shillings. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    UAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  375 

III  the  case  bctwccne  M''  Stoddard  and  M''  Symon  Bradstreete,  the  Court,      1  G  5  9. 
on  pvsall  &  due  consideration  of  all  the  evidences  produced  in  the  case,  finds    "       "^ 
for  the  defendant,  and  order  M""  Stoddard  to  pay  as  charges  for  y"  magis"  Courts  iudg« 
hearing  the  case  sixteene  shillings  &  sixpenc,  &  as  chardges  for  the  deputies  oil  '"  *^'  ^'°*' 
pounds  thirteenc  shillings.  Bradstreet 

The  Court,  on  hearing  the  case  coiTiendcd  to  this  Court  by  the  County  „.  ,'  „   . , 

'  "  .'J    Rich.  Smith 

Court  of  Cambridge  for  the  setlemcnt  of  Richard  Smith  &  his  wife,  on  a  full  soiled  an  in- 
habitant of 
hearing  of  tlie  case,  order,  that  Maulden  beare  the  chardg  of  Eichard  Smith  Boston. 

&  his  wife  for  the  tjnie  past,  and  that  the  sajd  Smith  and  his  wife  belong  to 

Boston. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticou  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  Isle  of  Shoales,  the  Court  Ans'  to  isle  of 
doc  not  judge  the  persons  petitioning  to  be  in  a  capacity  at  present  to  make  a  -^^' 
touneshipp. 

In  ans""  to  the  pcticon  of  Capt  Thomas  Sauage,  Lef  ?  Peter  Oliuer,  Capt  Courts  praunt 
James  Oliuer,  Capt  James  Johnson,  Left  W"  Hudson,  M'  Jeremiah  Houchin,  saua"e°  L  ^^ 
and  Ensigne  John  Euered,  humbly  desiring  the  favor  of  this  Court  to  graunt  *-"'^'''  ^^p' 

OliQ,  Jolm- 

vnto  them  mcete  ffarmes,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  the  peticoners  son,  Hudson, 
two  hundred  &  fifty  acres  of  land  a  peece,  on  condition  that  they  observe  the  ' 

order  propounded  for  the  regulating  in  the  laying  out  of  all  future  graunts, 
that  so  places  fitt  for  touncshipps  be  not  vtterly  spoyled,  to  the  great  damage 
of  this  coinon-wealth. 

The  Court  also  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  to  Cap?  W™  Dauis,  Capt  Courts  graunt 
Eliazer  Lusher,  Capt  Frauncis  Norton,  &  Cap?  Isack  Johnson  two  hundred  -j^g^^g^^  Lush'- 
and  fifty  acres  apeece,  on  the  same  termes  as  was  graunted  to  Capt  Sauage,  '^'■'  ^  Johnson. 
Oliuer,  &6. 

*Iii  answer  to  the  request  of  the  inhabitants  of  Saco,that  those  coiiiission-      [*o08.] 
ers  w*  are  appointed  to  lay  out  the  dividing  lyne  betweene  Saco  &  Scar-  Coiuittoe  to  lay 

out  y  head  Ijne 

borough  may  also  haue  power  to  runne  the  west  lyne  betwixt  Saco  &  Cape  of  saco,  &c. 
Porpus,  &  to  lay  out  the  head  Ijne  of  Saco,  as  they  shall  see  most  convenjent, 
&  make  retourne  thereof  to  the  next  Generall  Court,  the  Court  graunts  theire 
request. 

In  ans''  to  the  request  of  the  toune  of  Salem,  the  Court  doe  judge  it  Major  Hau- 
meete  to  impower  Major  W"  Hauthorne  in  the  toune  where  he  dwells  to  act  ^  "■'"^^P""^ 

in  all  criminall  cases,  binding  ouer  oflendo''s,  giving  oathes  in  ciuill  cases,  &  criminaii  cases, 

.  .  .  .  ,  &^- 

solemnizing  marriages,  as  any  one  magistrate   may  doe,  and  this   power  to 

continew  vntill  the  next  Court  of  Election.  M'  Danforth  to 

T  1  ■  i»T-i'ii-r»iTi  -^-'-^•  rr  runne  Salem 

In  ans''  to  the  motion  01  Kichard  Bellingham,  Esq),  in  rettercnce  to  a  ly^^e  referring 
farme  of  seven  hundred  acres,  graunted  him  neere  t^^•enty  yeares  a2:on,  and  '"  ^"  ^''^■ 

'  °  J    J  o       '  e^a   Belling- 

lajd  out,  as  he  a^hend,  by  ]\Iajo""  Hauthorne  &  Capt  Daucnport,  &  retourned  hams  meadow. 


376 


THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Major  Gen. 
Dennisons 
power  to  lay 
out  his  farme, 
&c. 


Andrew  Bel- 
char  &  Jn° 
Stone  to  lay 
out  P^side' 
Chaunceys  500 
acres. 

Frauncis  Smith 
fined  2:>. 


Courts  order 
relative  to  En- 
si2:ne  Sherman, 


M'  Tho.  Dan- 
forth  &  An- 
drew Belchar 
to  lay  out  M' 
Pelharas  40D 
acres. 

Ans'  to  inhab- 
itants of  Basse 
Kiuer  peticon. 


[*309.] 

Courts  ans'  to 

Braintry 

peticon. 


on  record,  since  w'"''  time  the  tonne  of  Salem  haue  taken  a  parcel!  of  meadow 
w'^''  was  in  pticular  belonging  to  the  same  farme,  pretending  the  sajd  meadow 
to  be  w"^in  sixe  miles  of  Salem  meeting  house,  north  west  from  Salem,  this 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  appointe  &  desire  M'  Thomas  Danforth  to  measure 
the  sajd  sixe  miles,  giving  notice  to  the  connstables  of  Salem,  &  to  make  re- 
tourne  to  y^  Court. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Deputy  Gouerno'"  shall  procure  INI'  Danforths  & 
!Majo''  Hauthorne,  Capt  Dauenport,  or  anj^  two  of  them,  to  lay  out  his  farme 
of  seven  hundred  acres  on  the  head  of  Salem  bounds  before  the  end  of  the 
fowerth  moneth  next,  w''''  if  he  shall  oraitt  to  doe,  it  shall  be  lawfull  for  the 
majo''  generall  to  lay  out  his  farme  w"'out  any  further  dependance  vpon  the 
laying  out  of  the  deputys  farme. 

In  ans"^  to  the  request  of  M"'  Charles  Chauncey,  the  Court  judgeth  it 
meete  to  order  &  impower  Andrew  Belchar  &  John  Stone  to  lay  out  fine 
hundred  acres  of  land  only,  as  relates  to  y*  Courts  graunts  to  y'  sajd  M' 
Chauncey. . 

Frauncis  Smith,  for  his  contemptuous  &  false  speech  in  the  Generall 
Court,  is  sentenced  to  be  sett  in  the  stockes  by  y"  marshall  for  one  whole 
hower.  The  Court,  on  consideration  of  Frauncis  Smiths  humble  acknowl- 
edgem'  of  his  sinfuU  carriage,  judge  meet,  in  steed  of  the  punishment  of 
the  stocks,  to  order  y'  twenty  shillings  be  taken  as  a  fine,  &d. 

In  refcrenc  to  y^  retourne  of  y*  County  Court  at  Cambridg,  relating 
to  Ensigne  Shermans  peticon,  formerly  presented  to  this  Court,  this  Court 
judgeth  it  meete  to  enable  the  County  Coiu't  at  Charles  Toune  next  to  bring 
the  case  to  a  full  issue  &  determination. 

M''  Thomas  Danforth  &  Andrew  Belchar  are  appointed  to  lay  out  fower 
hundred  acres  of  land,  formerly  graunted  to  M''  Herbert  Pelham  for  his  &  M' 
Walgraues  putting  in  one  hundred  pounds  in  y"  coiiion  stocke  on  adventure, 
in  any  free  place  betweene  Nipnop  &  Sudbury. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  y'  pt  of  Salem  on  the  north 
side  the  ferry  going  to  Ipswich,  humbly  desiring  to  be  a  touneship  of  them- 
selves, &6,  the  Court  doe  judge,  that  the  petitionei's  should  make  theire 
addresse  to  the  toune  of  Salem  in  reference  to  theire  requests,  and  they  agree- 
ing to  mutuall  satisfaction,  this  Court  will  be  ready  to  ans''  their  just  desires 
in  theire  peticon,  &  orders  the  toune  of  Salem  to  giue  the  petiConers  a  speedy 
meeting  to  effect  the  same. 

*In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  the  toune  of  Braintrje,  humbly  desiring  some 
releife  relating  to  seQ"  persons  brought  in  by  the  owners  of  the  iron  works  y' 
are  likely  to  be  chargeable  to  them,  especially  in  relation  to  Jn°  Frauncis,  his 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  377 

poore  condition  calling  for  present  releife,  &6,  this  Court  referrs  this  part  of      1  G  5  9. 
theire  peticon  to  the  next  County  Court  in  Suffolke,  where  all  partjes  concerned    "        '    "^ 

,  ,.,  1     .  •  1  D  •  1  t    ■  !•  28  May. 

may  haue  liberty  to  present  theu-e  respective  pleas  &  evidenc ;  and  in  rcter- 
cnc  to  theire  desire  of  a  new  plantation,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt 
them  liberty  to  sceke  out  a  place  &  presente  theire  desires,  w""  the  names  of 
such  persons  as  will  engage  to  carry  on  such  a  worke,  vnto  the  next  sessions 
of  this  Court. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Samuel  Basse,  the  toune  of  Braintrje  hauing  Ans'  to  Sam. 
peticoned  for  a  new  plantation,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  peticSner,  w"'  his  sonnes,     ^^^  peticon. 
may  haue  hberty  to  joyne  w"*  those  of  his  neighbors  w"''  will  carry  on  such 
a  worke,  w""  allowance  of  one  hundred  &  fifty  acres,  w^'in  the  bounds  of  the 
sajd  plantation,  more  then  his  just  proportion  w""  the  rest  of  his  neighbours. 

Wee,  whose  names  are  heerevnder  written,  haue,  according  to  the  order  Courts  confir- 
of  Court,  dat  24  May,  1655,  lajd  out  for  M'  Thomas  Wiggin  two  hundred  ^^^^^  ^-^  ^^^ 
acres  of  land,  that  is   to   say,  fower   score   acres   of  marish,  and  the  rest  in  *"  '^''P'  ^'^°- 

Wiggin. 

vpland  against  it,  all  of  it  lying  neare  the  heade  of  the  little  riuer  called  the 
Back  Riuer.     Wittnes  our  hands  this  28*  of  Aprill,  1659. 

EDWARD  STARBUCKE, 
HATEEVILLE  NUTTER. 

The  whole  Court  mett  together  allowes  &  approoues  of  this  retoui'ne. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Thomas  Brigden,  humbly  desiring  the  favo'  of  Ans'  to  Brig- 
this  Court,  that  whereas  Michaell  Carthricke,  late  of  Ipswich,  by  his  last  will 
gaue  vnto  John,  his  sonne,  all  his  houses  &  lands,  to  enjoy  to  him  &  his  heires 
foreuer,  as  in  the  sajd  will  appeares,  the  sajd  John  dying  after  he  had  attayned 
the  age  of  twenty  yeares,  that  in  right  of  Mildred,  his  wife,  only  sister  to  the 
sajd  John,  by  whom  the  sajd  Brigden  hath  children,  he  might  haue  due  & 
just  releife,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  order,  that  Mildred,  the  only 
daughter  of  the  sajd  Michael  Carthrick,  &  sister  &  heire  to  sajd  John  Carth- 
ricke, shall  haue  &  enjoy  to  hir  &  hir  heires  for  euer  all  those  houses  &  lands 
•yych  -were  by  the  sajd  Michaell  Carthricks  will  giuen  &  bequeathed  to  the  sajd 
John,  so  as  the  sajd  Thomas  Brigden,  &  Mildi-ed,  &  his  wife,  pay  the  widow 
of  the  late  Carthricke  tenn  pounds. 

In  ans''  to   the  peticon  of  Lef?  Frauncis  Johnson,  humbly  craving  the  Ans'  to  Fraun- 
remittment  of  a  fine  imposed  on  him  by  the  County  Court  at  Salem  for  selling  petiCon. 
strong  licquors,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  remitt  the  peticoner  tenn  pounds  ^^'^  remitted, 
of  his  fine,  but  doe  not  think  it  meete  to  graunt  him  liberty  to  sell  strong 

VOL.  IV.  PART   I.  48 


378  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

16  59.  waters,  &  do  declare,  that  if  lie  shall  offend  in  the  like  manner  any  more,  he 

^    ~^  must  expect  no  favo'^. 
A  s'  to  Bel-  ^^  ^^^'  ^^  y*  peticbn  of  Jerremiah  Belchar,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to 

chars  peticon,  graunt  the  peticoner  three  hundred  acres  of  land,  to  be  laid  out  as  it  be  no 

300  ac's  g"d  on  °  ^ 

condicon.  ^judice  to  any  place  that  is  otherwise  fitt  for  a  plantacon,  but  adjoyning  to 

some  plantacon  or  other. 

M-  Joyiiffes  AVhereas  the  last  ship  y*  came  into  this  harbo'  was  consigned  to  M'  John 

mault  &c.  Joyliffe,  w*^*"  brought  twenty  seven  quarters  of  mault,  on  his  request,  this  Coiu-t 
judgeth  it  meet  to  allow  the  sajd  John  Joyliffe  to  laud  tenn  quarters  of  the 
sajd  mault,  for  the  shipps  provission,  &  also,  on  his  giving  security  to  double 
value  of  the  other  seventeene  q''ters  &  one  half  of  mault,  that  he  will  not  sell 
the  same,  or  any  parte  thereof,  in  any  part  of  this  jurisdiction,  on  giving  of 
w'^''  secmity  to  the  Tresurer  he  hath  also  liberty  to  land  the  sajd  seventeene 
q'ters  one  halfe  of  mault  to  aire,  &<?,  and  to  shipp  it  away  to  Monhatoes  or 
elswhere  out  of  y'  jurisdicon  w'Mn  this  three  moneth. 
[*310.]  *In  ans'  to  the  petition    of  M"^  Martha  Coggan,  humbly  craving  the 

Ans'  to  M"       establishment  of  the  agreement  in  all  respects  betweene  hir  late  husband,  M"' 

Coggaus  peti- 

cjii.  John  Coggan,  &  hirself  before  hir  intermarriage  w'**  him,  as  it  is  signed  by 

M"^  Nowell,  M''  Hibbins,  &  M'  Ting,  as  it  is  to  the  peticbn  annexed,  and  that 
shee  might  be  impowred,  as  execcutrixe  only  to  y"^  last  will  of  hir  late  hus- 
band, Coggan,  out  of  the  remainder  of  his  estate  to  sell  some  housing  for 
payment  of  his  just  debts,  and  for  the  estate  y*  remajnes,  it  may,  by  order  of 
this  Court,  be  setled  as  neere  as  may  be  according  to  his  will,  the  Covu-t,  on 
pervsall  of  the  coinittees  retourne,  that  gaue  optunity  to  such  as  were  con- 
cerned to  aj)peare  &  make  there  due  objections,  judge  meete  to  graunt  hir 
requests  in  the  sajd  peticon  in  the  seuerall  parts  thereof,  provided  that 
the  house  w'^''  Richard  Wooddey  alleadgeth  is  mortgaged  be  not  sold  be- 
fore cleared,  if  it  be  not  already  donne,  but  other  houses  or  lands  that  is 
convenient  to  be  sould  may  be  sold  according  to  the  discretion  of  the 
execcutrixe. 
Ans'  to  Salis-  In  aus''  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  new  toune  of  Salisbury, 

touneTpeti-  SO  Called,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  order,  that  the  proposall  signed 
by  M"^  W™  Worcester,  tendring  his  going  vp  euery  foweth  Lords  day  to 
help  them,  &  y'  due  pvition  be  made  according  to  the  sajd  proposalls,  v/"^  are 
on  file,  be  attended  by  the  church  of  Sahsbury  for  the  supply  both  of  the 
old  and  new  toune,  as  the  case  may  require,  and  that  the  one  halfe  of  the 
fines  lajd  on  the  peticoners  for  non  attendance  on  the  publicke  ordinances  at 
the  old  toune  be  respitted  vntlU  the  next  Generall  Court. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Springfeild,  itt  is   ordered. 


con. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  379 

that  Capt  John  Pinchon,  Lef  ?  Elitzur  Holjocke,  and  M""  Samuell  Chapin,  for  1  G  5  9. 
the  yearc  ensuing,  and  vntill  the  Court  shall  take  further  order,  sluiU  hauc  '  '*  ' 
full  power  &  authoritje  to  gouerne  the  inhabitants  of  Springfeild,  and  to  heare  . 
and  determine  all  cases  &  offences,  both  civill  and  criminall,  that  reach  not  Courts* 
life,  Ijmbe,  or  banishment,  according  to  the  lawes  h^re  established ;  provided, 
it  shall  &  maybe  lawfull  for  any  party  to  appeale  to  the  Court  of  Asistants  at 
Boston,  so  as  they  prosecute  the  same  according  to  the  order  of  this 
Courte  ;  provided  also,  that  theu-e  trjalls  maybe  by  the  oathes  of  sLxe  men, 
if  twelve  cannot  be  had  for  that  service,  and  that  Northampton  be  referred 
to  Springfeild  in  referenc  to  County  Courts,  vf'^^  Coiuts  shall  be  kept,  one  on 
the  last  Twesday  in  the  first  moneth,  &  the  other  on  the  last  Twesday  in  Sep- 
tember, ycarcly,  at  Springfeild,  vnlesse  the  coinissioners  aforesajd  shall  sec 
just  cawse  to  keepe  one  of  them  at  North  Hampton ;  and  the  two  Courts  to 
be  kept  at  Springfeild  or  at  North  Hampton,  as  aforesajd,  shall  in  all  re- 
spects haue  the  power  and  priviledges  of  any  County  Courte  till  this  Court 
shall  see  cause  otherwise  to  determine  ;  provided,  they  shall  not  warne  aboue 
fewer  jurymen  from  Northampton  to  Springfeild  or  from  Springfeild  to  North- 
ampton ;  and  all  fines  as  well  as  entry  of  accons  shall  goe  towards  the  defray- 
ing of  chardges  of  Courts ;  and  out  of  Court  the  coinissioners,  or  any  two  of 
them,  agreeing,  may  act  in  all  respects  as  any  one  magistrate  may  doe,  either 
at  Springfeild  or  Northampton  ;  and  the  coiiiission  graiinted  last  yeere  respect- 
ing Northampton  is  hereby  repealed. 

*In  ans'  to  y*  peticon  of  diuerse  y"  souldiery  of  Springfeild,  the  Court      [*311.] 
judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  liberty  to  the  coiuission  officers  of  the  ffbote  company  Ans'  to  y 

a      •       t*  •■}  M  m  •  •    1  •        souldiers  of 

at  Springfeild  to  allow  off  &  appomt  seven  or  eight  persons  to  serve  w""  theire  Springfeild 
horse,  they  being  compleately  fitted  w"'  horse  &  furnished  according  as  the  P'''^'"'"- 
law  requires  of  such  as  are  troopers,  &  being  so  fitted,  not  to  be  required  to 
excercise  w""  y"  company  on  foote,  but  in  all  other  respects  to  be  vnder  the 
comand  of  the  coinission  officers  of  foote. 

There  being  a  coinission  graunted  to  Cap?  John  Pinchon,  Lef  ?  Holiocke,  Coiuissioiiers 
&  M'  Samuell  Chapin,  of  Springfeild,  for  the  administration  of  justice  there,  oath's  power 
allowing  them  the  power  of  a  County  Court,  &6,  as  by  the  sajd  coinission  more  ^°  marry,  &c. 
fully  appeares,  it  is   therefore  ordered,  that  the  sajd  Captaine  Pinchon,  be- 
fore he  depart,  take  an  oath  for  the  faithfuU  dischardge  of  liis  sajd  coinission, 
&  be  impowred  to  giue  oath  to  the  other  two  coinissioners,  the  oath  to  be  the 
same  ^v"^  was  appointed  by  this  Court  in  October,  1652  ;  and  that  M'  Pinchon 
be  impowred  to  solemnize  marriages.     Y'  sajd  M""  Pinchon  tooke  his  oath  in 
open  Court  accordingly. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Meadfeild,  the  Court  judgeth 


380 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1659. 

28  May. 
Addition  to 
Meadfeild 
bounds. 


Comissioners 
to  lay  out  Scar- 
borough, Fal- 
mouth, &  Saco 
bounds. 


Comittee  to 
draw  up  an 
order  ab'  cloth. 


Courts  encour- 
agement to 
Norwottocke, 
&  engagm'  to 
M'  Brads",  M' 
Symonds,  &£. 


W»  Holton 
Bworne. 


[*312.] 

Ans'  to  George 
Halsalls  peti- 


it  meete  to  graunt  vnto  them  as  an  addition  vnto  theire  former  bounds,  &  at 
the  west  ends  thereof,  two  miles  east  &  west,  &  fowcr  miles  north  &  south 
provided  it  intrench  not  vjion  any  former  graunts,  &  y'  Capt  Lusher  &  Left 
Fisher  are  hereby  appointed  to  lay  it  out  according  to  graunt,  &  to  make  re- 
tourne  thereof  to  the  next  session  of  Court. 

Whereas  this  Court  is  informed  that  the  tounes  of  Saco,  Scarborough, 
&  Falmouth  are  not  as  yett  bounded  by  any  direct  Ijne  running  back  into 
the  countrje  betweene  toune  &  toune,  the  doing  whereof  may  conduce  much 
to  theire  future  peaceable  settling,  it  is  hereby  ordered,  that  Capt  Nicholas 
Shapleigh,  M"^  Abraham  Preble,  M""  Edward  Rishworth,  &  Left  John  Saim- 
ders,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  haue  full  power  to  runne  a  dividing  Ijne 
betweene  the  aforementioned  tounes,  to  bound  them  as  they  see  meete  for 
theire  most  convenient,  the  coiiiissioners  aforesajd  giving  each  toune  due 
warning,  &  appoint  a  meete  tjme  for  the  doing  thereof,  &  make  theire  retonrne 
vnto  the  next  Generall  Court. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Majo''  Symon  Willard,  M"^  Ephraim  Child,  &  Leil 
Richard  Sprague  shall  &  hereby  are  appointed  a  coiiiittee  to  drawe  vp  an  order, 
Avhich  may  g>vent  deceipt  in  making  &  dressing  of  cloth,  and  to  present  the 
same  to  the  next  sessions  of  this  Court. 

This  Court  having  heretofore  graunted  to  the  honnored  M'  Bradstreet, 
M"^  Symonds,  Majo''  Genii  Dennison,  &  Majo''  Atherton,  each  of  them  a  farme, 
w'^''  they  intended  to  take  vpon  Conecticott  Riuer,  aboue  Spriugfeild,  but  for- 
asmuch as  the  taking  of  it  there  will  be  very  ^judicjall  to  the  new  plantations 
now  going  on  there,  which  this  Court  is  very  wilHng  to  encourage,  this  Court 
doth  therefore  desire  y'  honnored  magistrates  before  mentioned  to  finde  out 
some  other  place  to  take  vp  theire  farmes  in ;  and  if  it  shall  not  be  to  ajquall 
sattisfiiction  in  respect  of  qualUtje,  this  Court  will  be  willing  to  make  it  vp  in 
quantitje. 

It  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  Willjam  Holton,  who  is  chosen  &  allowed 
off  as  a  coiiiissioner  at  North  Hampton,  shall  haue  his  oath  giuen  him  by 
some  of  the  magis''  before  the  Court  breake  vp,  &  also  be  impowred  to  giue 
oath  to  the  other  two  comissioners  &  connstable,  to  prevent  them  any  further 
trouble  about  it.  Y"  sd  W™  Holton  tooke  his  oath  accordmgly  before  y« 
Court. 

*In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  George  Halsall,  the  Coiu-t,  on  a  hearing  of  the 
case  betweene  the  sajd  George  Halsall  &  Joane,  his  late  wife,  doe  order,  that 
the  determination  of  it  be  referd  to  the  next  sessions,  &  in  the  meane  time 
forbidd  either  party  to  marry. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Anthony  Eames,  who  affii-ming  that  himself. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  381 

^ih  -^T  Busby  &  Robt  Martjn,  were  not  only  appointed  to  runne  the  Ijne  be-      165  9. 
twixt  tliis  pattcnt  &  Plimoutli  pattent,  which  was  pfonned  by  them,  but  was    ""     'i       ^ 

.  J     e  ^^  May. 

promised  sattisfaction  for  theire  tjme  &  chardge,  which  he  neuer  receaved,  &  ^^^,^^  j^^^^^_ 

therefore  humbly  desireth  that  he  may  haue  due  sattisfaction  for  his  tjme  &  Eames  peticon. 

pajnes,  or  that  his  sonne  in  lawe,  Michaell  Pearse,  may  be  freed  of  a  fine  w* 

was  lajd  vpon  him  by  the  County  Court  in  June  last,  the  Court  judgeth  it 

meete  to  order  the  country  Tresm-er  to  examine  the  accounts  of  the  peticoner 

in  refference  to  the  p>misses,  &  y'  payment  be  made  of  what  shall  be  found  to 

be  his  just  due  out  of  the  cou.ntry  Tresury. 

M'  Thomas  Danforth  is  appointed  to  joyne  w*''  Cap?  Thomas  Wiggin  to  M'  Thomas 

Danforth  to 

keepe  the  Court  to  y"  eastwai-d  for  this  yeare.  keepe  eastern 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Tresurer  dispose  of  M'  Nortons  bookes  now  at  ^°"'^- 
the  presse,  deliuering  euery  member  of  this  Court  one,  and  to  the  seuerall 
tounes  ia  proportion  to  theire  rates,  &  twenty  or  thirty  to  M"'  Norton,  present- 
ing this  Courts  thankfuU  acknowledgement  to  him  for  his  pajnes  at  present,  & 
giving  edy  minister  one  y"  like  order  about  y*  lawes. 

This  Court,  in  ans''  to  M'  John  Wilsons  request,  doth  graunt  liberty  to  M'  "Wilsons 

1000  acres. 

lay  out  the  thousand  acres  formerly  graunted  him  in  y"  most  convenient  place 
or  places  at  the  end  or  ends  of  that  graunt  w*  this  Court  graunted  to  y^  toune 
of  Meadfeild  as  an  addition  to  theire  bounds. 

This  Court  is  adjourned  to  y"  18  of  October  next,  at  eight  of  the  clocke 
in  the  morning. 


JU  the  second  Sessions  of  the  Generall  Court,  held  at  Boston,  iS'*    is  October. 

of  October,  1659. 

WHEREAS,  according  to  lawe,  all  cases  wherein  the  bench  &  jury  doe 
not  agree  in  the  majne  issue,  the  Generall  Court  is  to  determine  the 
same,  which  by  experience  being  found  very  burdensome  to  the  countrje,  it  is 
therefore  ordered,  that  henceforth  no  action  of  a  civill  nature  shall,  vnder  any 
pretence  w'soeuer,  come  either  iinediately  or  from  the  County  Court  to  the 
Generall  Court,  but  in  case  of  disagreement  betweene  the  bench  and  jury,  at 
any  County  Court,  the  case  shall  be  determined  at  the  next  Court  of  Asistants, 
in  manner  ffoUowlng  :  i.  e.,  the  attachment,  w"'  the  security  for  appearance  at 
the  County  Court,  *shall  be  continued  to  the  Court  of  Asistants,  and  if  the  [*313.] 
plaintiffe  shall  sec  cause  further  to  prosecute  his  action,  he  shall  then  giue 
sumons  to  the  defendant  as  the  lawe  provideth,  and  shall  also  take  out  of  the 


18  October. 
All  cases 


382  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1659.      records  of  the  County  Court  the  records  of  the  sajd  case,  V'  the  evidences 
presented  by  both  partjes,  and    bring   the  same  to  the  Court  of  Asistants, 
■wliere,  after  the  case  is  presented  as  it  was  at  the  County  Court,  both  partjes 
wherein  y»        sliall  haue  Hberty  to  make  any  new  pleas  or  evidences  before  the  bencli  and 

bench  and  jury 

disagree  tria-  jury  ;  and,  in  case  the  plaiutiffe  shall  not  further  prosecute  his  action  in  man- 
Court  of  ^^^"  ^*  i^  hereby  provided,  the  defendant  shall  then  haue  judgment  for  his 
Asistants.  costs  at  the  County  Court  graunted  him  at  the  next  Court  of  that  county. 
Day  of  thanks-  Whereas  through  the  rich  favor  of  God  towards  his  poore  people  in  these 
'"'  ends  of  the  earth,  notw"'standing  our  great  securitje,  declensions,  &  vnworthy 
walkings  vnder  such  vnparrelled  enjoyments,  he  hath  hitherto  continewd 
our  peace  &  libertjes,  both  civill  &  ecclesiasticall,  of  all  which  wee  haue  had 
long  &  aboundant  experjence,  and  in  speciall  this  last  suiiier,  hath  favorably 
accepted  the  desires  of  his  people  to  humble  themselves  before  him  w"'  a 
gracious  retourne  to  our  prajers,  and  hath  not  as  yet  delivered  vs  into  the 
hands  of  Sathan  and  his  instruments,  who  band  themselves  together,  &  by 
theire  horrid  blasphemies  against  the  name  of  our  God,  his  trueth,  ordinances, 
&  by  theire  seditious  practises  &  rebelljon  against  the  supreame  authoritjc  of 
this  coinonwealth,  doe  seeke  our  utter  ruine  &  destruction,  but  hath  given 
pledges  of  his  future  favour  in  giving  of  his  people  one  hart  &  resolvednes 
of  spirit,  through  his  grace  &  strength,  (in  theire  respective  places,)  to  beare 
wittnes  against  them,  as  also  in  that  he  hath  given  some  come  comfortable  hopes 
of  making  vp  that  great  breach  that  the  enemy  had  made  amongst  his  pretious 
servants  at  Hartford,  together  mth  his  continewed  care  for  our  provission  & 
protection,  from  the  begining  of  the  yeare  to  the  end  thereof,  in  giving  of  vs 
fruitefull  seasons,  and  in  that  the  lives,  peace,  health,  &  prosperitjc  of  his  poore 
people  are  yett  pretious  in  his  eyes,  all  which  this  Court  taking  into  theire 
serious  consideration,  doe  coiiiend  vnto  theire  beloved  brethren  &  neighbors, 
the  inhabitants  of  this  colony,  the  eighth  day  of  December  to  be  kept  a  solcnine 
day  of  thanksgiving,  for  the  sanctifying  of  the  name  of  the  Lord,  by  a  humble 
&  thankfull  acknowledgment  of  these  &  all  other  his  great  favor's,  &  rejoycing 
before  him,  as  also  for  the  further  imploring  of  his  gracious  &  favorable  pres- 
enc  yet  further  to  be  continved,  not  only  to  ourselves,  but  to  ours  after  vs. 
Coffiissioners  There  being  seuerall  tonnes  w"'in  this  jiuisdiction  who  are  not  only  re- 
in tonnes^  o  j^Q^g  fjon^  any  magistrate,  but  also  destitute  of  any  person  impowred  to 
solemnize  marriage,  the  want  whereof  is  an  occasion  of  much  trouble  &  some- 
tjmes  disapointment,  which  to  prevent,  it  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Johnson  for 
Wooborue,  Left  French  for  Billirrikey  &  Chelmsford,  W™  Coudrey  for  Red- 
ding, Capl  Marshall  for  Lynn,  M'  Thomas  Nojce  for  Sudbury,  M'  Edw 
"Woodman  for  Newbury,  Left  Robert  Pike  for  Salisbury,  Lef ?  Christopher 


18  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  333 

Hussie   for  Hampton,  Cap?  Eliazer  Lusher  for  Dedliam,  M'  Wheelocke  for      1659. 
Mcadfeild,   Cap?    Joshua    Hubbard    for    Hingham,    Cap?    W""    Torrey    for 
Wcimouth,  M''  Peter  Brackett  for  Braintrje,  shall  &  hereby  are  appointed  & 
empowred  to  joyne  in  marriage  such  persons  w^'in  theire  respective  tounes  or 
Ijmitts  as  shall  desire  the  same,  being  published  according  to  lawe. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  W"»  Eobbinson,  Marmaduke   Stephenson,  &  Mary      [*314.] 
Dyer,  Quakers,  now  in  prison  for  theire  rebelljon,  sedition,  &  presumptuous  Order  to  bring 

y"  Quakers  to 

obtrudmg  themselves  vpon  vs,  notw"'standing  theire  being  sentenced  to  ban-  triaii. 
ishment  on  pajne  of  death,  as  vnderminers  of  this  gouernment,  &S,  shall  be 
brought  before  this  Court  for  theire  trjalls,  to  suffer  the  poenalty  of  the  lawe, 
(the  just  reward  of  theire  transgression,)  on  the  morrow  morning,  being  the 
nineteenth  of  this  instant. 

W™  Robbinson,  Marmaduke  Stephenson,  &  Mary  Dyer,  banished  this  juris-  Sentence  of 
diction  by  the  last  Court  of  Asistants  on  pajne  of  death,  being  coniitted  by  order  Ro^bbinfon 
of  the  Generall  Court,  were  sent  for,  brought  to  the  barre,  acknowledged  them-  Marmaduke 

Stephenson,  & 

selves  to  be  the  persons  banished.  After  a  full  hearing  of  what  the  prisoners  Mary  Dyer, 
could  say  for  themselves,  it  was  put  to  the  qusestion,  whither  W"  Eobbinson, 
Marmaduke  Stevenson,  &  Maiy  Dyer,  the  persons  now  in  prison,  who  haue  binn 
convicted  for  Quakers,  &  banished  this  jurisdiction  on  pajne  of  death,  should 
be  putt  to  death  according  as  the  lawe  provides  in  that  case.  The  Court  re- 
solved this  quaestion  on  the  aflirmative ;  and  y°  Gouerno"",  in  open  Court,  de- 
clard  the  sentanc  to  W™  Eobbinson,  y'  was  brought  to  y*  barr  :  W™  Eobinson, 
yow  shall  goe  from  hence  to  the  place  from  whence  yow  came,  &  from  thence  to 
the  place  of  execution,  &  there  hang  till  yow  be  dead.  The  like  sentanc  the 
Gouerno'',  in  open  Court,  pronounced  against  Marmaduke  Steephenson  & 
]\Iary  Djer,  being  brought  to  y"  barre  one  after  another,  in  y*  same  words. 

"\yiiereas  W"  Eobbinson,  Marmaduke   Stephenson,  &   Mary  Dier  are  Orderrequir- 
sentenced  by  this  Court  to  death  for  theire  rebellion,  &6,  it  is  ordered,  that  jg^^g  ^^j  ^,^^_ 
the  secretary  issue  out  his  warrant  to  Edward  Michelson,  marshall  generall,  "'^'^^^  ^°'^  5" 

prisoners  exe- 

for  repajring  to  the  prison  on  the  twenty  seventh  of  this  instant  October,  &  cution. 
take  the  sajd  Willjam  Eobbinson,  Marmaduke  Stephenson,  &  Mary  Dyer  into 
his  custody,  &  them  forthwith,  by  the  aide  of  Cap?  James  Oliuer  w*  one  hun- 
dred souldjers,  taken  out  by  his  order  proportionably  out  of  each  company  in 
Boston,  compleately  armed  w""  pike,  &  musketteers,  w*  pouder  &  buUett,  to 
lead  them  to  the  place  of  execution,  &  there  see  them  hang  till  they  be  dead, 

^  .  .        M'Simms& 

and   in  theire  going,  being  there,  &  retourne,  to  see   all  things  be  carrjed  M' Norton  to 
peaceably  &  orderly.     Warrants  issued  out  accordingly.  makin"  y 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  Eeuerend  M-^  Zackeiy  Simes  &  M''  John  Norton  prisoners  sen- 

•'  cible  of  their 

repajre  to  the  prison,  &  tender  theire  endeavors  to  make  the  prisoners  sen-  dainger,  &c. 


384 


THE  KECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 


1659. 

18  October. 
Mary  Djer  re- 
preiued. 


[*315.] 


County  Courts 
adjournment. 


Guard  for  y* 
toune. 


Toune  watch. 


cible  of  thelre  approaching  dainger  by  the  sentence  of  this  Court,  &  prepare 
them  for  theire  approaching  ends. 

Whereas  Mary  Dyer  is  condemned  by  the  Generall  Court  to  be  executed 
for  hir  offences,  on  the  petition  of  William  Dier,  hir  sonnc,  it  is  ordered,  that 
the  sajd  Mary  Dyer  shall  haue  liberty  for  forty  eight  howers  after  this  day  to 
depart  out  of  this  jurisdiction,  after  which  tjme,  being  found  therein,  she  is 
forthwith  to  be  executed,  &  in  the  meane  time  that  she  be  kept  close  *prisoner 
till  hir  Sonne  or  some  other  be  ready  to  carry  hir  away  w"'in  the  aforesajd 
tjme ;  and  it  is  further  ordered,  that  she  shall  be  carrjed  to  the  place  of 
execution,  &  there  to  stand  vpon  the  gallowes,  with  a  rope  about  her  necke, 
till  the  rest  be  executed,  &  then  to  retourne  to  the  prison  &  remajne  as 
aforesajd. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  next  County  Court,  w'^''  should  beginne  on  the 
twenty  fifth  of  this  instant  October,  shall  be  &  is  hereby  adjourned  to  the  two 
&  twentjeth  of  Noueniber  next,  and  that  iu  the  meane  tjme  it  shall  be  laufull 
for  any  plaintifTe  to  serve  liis  attachment  or  suinons,  as  the  lawe  directs, 
&  he  might  haue  done  before  this  adjournment,  referring  to  y°  sixe  dajes 
warning. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  thirty  sixe  of  the  souldiers  be  ordered  by  Capt  Oliuer 
to  remajne  in  &  about  the  toune  as  centinells  to  preserve  the  peace  of  the 
place  whiles  the  rest  goe  to  the  execution. 

It  is  ordered,  that  the  select  men  of  Boston  shall  &  heereby  are  required 
&  impowred  to  presse  tenn  or  twelve  able  &  faithfull  persons  euery  night 
during  the  sitting  of  this  Court  to  watch  with  great  care  the  toune,  especially 
the  prison,  &  to  allow  them  two  shillings  a  ]peece,  w"*"  shall  be  allowed  them 
out  of  theire  proportion  of  the  country  rate. 

The  Court,  having  considered  of  the  seuerall  declarations  which  haue 
binn  presented  to  vindicate  the  justice  of  this  Courts  proceedings  in  refference 
to  the  Quakers,  doe  thankfully  acknowledg  themselves  engaged  to  the  gent" 
that  haue  taken  pajnes  therein,  &  for  the  sattisfaction  of  such  as  may  any 
way  be  doubtfull,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  two  declarations  hcerevnder  written 
shall  goe  forth,  by  the  authority  &  order  of  the  Generall  Court,  the  first  of 
them  to  the  presse,  to  be  printed,  the  other  from  the  secretary  to  y"  tounes,  in 
writting. 

Although  the  justice  of  oui-  proceedings  against  W™  Robbinson,  Marma- 
duke  Stephenson,  &  Mary  Djer,  supported  by  the  authority  of  this  Covut,  the 
lawes  of  the  countrje,  &  the  lawes  of  God,  may  rather  perswade  vs  to  expect 
incouragement  &  coiuendation  from  all  prudent  &  pious  men,  then  convince 
vs  of  any  necessity  to  apologize  for  the  same,  yett,  forasmuch  as  men  of 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY   IN    NEW  ENGLAND.  335 

weaker  parts,  out  of  pitty  &  comisseration,  (a  comcndable  &  Christian  virtue,  yet      1659. 
easily  abused,  &  susceptible  of  sinister  &  daingerous  impressions,)  for  want    '       ''    "^ 
of  full  information,  may  be  lesse  sattisfied,  &  men  of  perverse  principles  may 
take  occasion  heercby  to  calumniate  vs,  &  render  vs  as  bloody  persecutors, — 
to  sattisfy  the  one,  &  stop  the  mouths  of  the  other,  wee  thought  it  requisite 
to  declare  — 

That  about   three  yeares  since,  diuerse   persons,  professing  themselves  Courts  declara 
Quakers,  (of  whose  pernitious  opinions  &  practises  wee  had  received  intelli-    "tth™ 
gence  from  good  hands,)  from  Barbadoes  &  England  arivcd  at  Boston,  whose  <:'='=<iiDgs  ag« 

Quakers. 

persons  were  only  secured  to  be  sent  away  by  the  first  opportunity,  without 
censure  or  punishment,  although  theire  professed  tenents,  turbulent  &  con- 
temptuous behaviour  to  authoritje,  would  haue  justified  a  seuerer  annimadver- 
sion,  yet  the  prudence  of  this  Court  was  cxcersised  onely  in  making  provission 
to  secure  the  peace  &  order  heere  established  against  theire  attemjjts,  whose 
designe  (wee  were  well  assured  by  our  oune  experjence,  as  well  as  by  the 
example  of  theire  predecessors,  in  Munster)  was  to  vndermine  &  ruine  the 
same  ;  and  accordingly  a  lawe  was  made  &  published,  prohibbitting  all  masters 
of  shipps   to   bring   any  Quakers   into   this  jurisdiction,  &  themselves   from 
coming  in,  on  poenalty  of  the  house   of  correction,  till  they  could  be  sent 
away,  notw"'standing  w*,  by  a  backc  doore  they  found  entrance,  &  the  pcenalty 
inflicted  on  themselves  prooving  insufficjent  to  restrajne  theire  impudent  & 
insolent  obtrusions,  was  encreased  by  the   losse   of  the   eares   of  those  that 
offended  the  second  tjme,  w"*"  also  being  too  weake  a  defence  against  theire 
imiietuous  &  fanaticke  fury,  necessitated  vs  to  endeavo''  our  security,  &  vpou 
serious  consideration,  after  the  former  experiments  of  theire  incessant  assaults, 
a  lawe  was  made,  that  such  persons  should  be  banished,  on  pajne  of  death, 
according  to  the  example  of  England,  in  theire  provission  against  Jesuitts ; 
which  sentence  being  regularly  pronounced   at  the  last  Court  of  Asistants 
against   the  partjes    aboue   named,  &  they,  either  retourning  or  continuing 
presumptuously  in  this  jurisdiction  after  the  tjme  Ijmitted,  were  apprehended, 
&,  owning   themselves  to  be  the   persons  banished,  v/ere   sentenced  (by  this 
Court)  to  death,  according  to  y'^  lawe  aforesajd,  *which  hath  beene  executed     [*316.] 
vpon  two  of  them.     Mary  Djer,  vpon  the  petition  of  hir  sonne,  &  the  mercy 
&  clemency  of  this  Court,  had  liberty  to  depart  w"'in  two  dajes,  w"^*"  shee  hath 
accepted  of.     The  consideration  of  our  graduall  proceedings  will  vindicate  vs 
from  the  clamarous  accusation  of  seuerritje,  our  oune  just  &  necessary  defence 
calling  vpon  vs  (other  means  fajling)  to  offer  the  points  W^"  these  persons  haue 
violently  &  wilfully  rushed  vpon,  &  thereby  are  become  felon'  de  se,  which 
might  it  haue  been  prevented,  and  the  soueraigne  lawe,  salus  populj,  beene 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  49 


—   Y ~^ 

18  October. 


386  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

165  9.  preserved,  our  former  proceedings,  as  well  as  the  sparing  of  Mary  Dier  vpon 
an  inconsiderable  intercession,  will  manifestly  evince  wee  desire  theire  life 
absent  rather  then  theire  death  present. 

Many  of  that  sect  of  people  which  are  coiiionly  called  Quakers  hauing, 
from  forreine  parts  &  from  other  colonjes,  come  at  soundiy  times  and  in 
seuerall  compaujes  &  noumbers  into  this  jurisdiction  of  the  ^lassachusetts,  & 
those  lesser  punishments  of  the  house  of  corrections  &  imprisonment  for  a 
tjme  hauing  beene  inflicted  on  some  of  them,  but  not  sufficing  to  deterr  & 
keepe  them  away,  but  that  still  they  haue  presumed  to  come  hither,  vpon  no 
other  ground  or  occasion  (for  ought  that  could  appeare)  but  to  scatter  theire 
corrupt  opinions  &  to  drawe  others  to  theire  way,  &  so  to  make  disturbance, 
and  the  honnored  Generall  Court  having  herevpon  made  an  order  &  lawe, 
that  such  persons  should  be  banuished  &  remooved  hence,  on  pajne  of  death, 
to  be  inflicted  on  such  of  them  as  after  theire  bannishment  should  presume  to 
returne  &  come  hither  againe,  the  making  »&:  execution  of  the  aforesajd  lawe 
may  be  cleered  to  be  warrantable  &  just  vpon  such  grounds  &  considerations 
as  these,  viz. :  — 

1.  The  doctrine  of  this  sect  of  people  is  destructive  to  fundamental! 
trueths  of  religion,  as  the  sacred  Trinitje,  the  person  of  Christ,  &  the  Holy 
Scriptures,  as  a  perfect  rule  of  faith  &  life,  as  ]M'^  Norton  hath  shewed  in  his 
tractate  against  the  Quakers ;  yea,  that  one  opinion  of  theires,  of  being  per- 
fectly pure  &  w"'out  sinne,  tends  to  ouerthrow  the  whole  gospell  &  the  very 
vitalls  of  Christianitje,  for  they  that  haue  no  sinne  haue  no  neede  of  Christ,  or 
of  his  sattisfaction,  or  his  blood  to  cleanse  them  from  theire  sinne ;  no  neede 
of  faith  to  beleive  in  Christ,  for  imputed  righteousnes  to  justify  them,  as  being 
perfectly  just  in  themselves ;  no  neede  of  repentance,  as  being  righteous  & 
w^'out  sinne,  for  repentance  is  only  for  such  as  have  sinne ;  no  neede  of  grow- 
ing in  grace,  nor  of  the  word  &  ordinances  of  God,  that  they  may  grow  there- 
by, for  what  neede  they  to  grow  better  who  are  already  perfect  ?  no  neede  of 
Christian  watchfulnes  against  sinne  who  haue  no  such  ennemy  as  sinne  dwell- 
ing in  them,  as  Paul  had,  but  are  free  from  the  presence  &  being  of  sinne,  & 
therefore  Christ  needs  not  to  say  to  them,  as  sometjmes  to  his  disciples, 
'  Watch  &  pray,  that  yee  enter  not  into  temptation :  the  spirit  is  willing,  but 
the  flesh  is  weake ; '  for  hauing  no  such  flesh  or  -weakenesse  in  them,  they  haue 
no  such  neede  of  watchfulnesse ;  they  haue  no  need  to  purify  themselves 
dayly,  as  all  Christians  should,  for  they  are  perfectly  pure  already ;  no 
neede  to  put  off"  the  old  man  and  put  on  the  new,  like  the  Christians  to 
whom  Paul  wrote  his  Epistles,  for  what  neede  they  to  doe  this  when  they  ai-e 
already  w"'out  sinne,  &   so  w*''out  all   remainders  of  the   old  man  ?     Such 


18  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    15 AY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  387 

fundamentalls  of  Chiistfanitjc  arc  ouertliroune  by  this  one  opinion  of  theires,  &      16  59. 

how  much  more  by  all  thcire  otlier  doctrines  !     Now,  the  corTiandmcnt  of  God 

is  plajne,  that  he  that  presumes  to  siieakc  lyes  in  the  name   of  the   Lord,  & 

turne  people  out  of  the  way  which  the  Lord  hath  coinanded  to  walk  in,  such 

an  one  must  not  Hue,  but  be  put  to  death.     Zach  13:  3  ;  Deu?  13:  6,  &  18 : 

20.     &  if  the  doctrine  of  the  Quakers  be  not  such,  let  the  wise  judge. 

2.  It  is  the  cortiandmcnt  of  the  blessed  God,  that  Christians  should  obey 
magistrates.  Tit  3 :  1  ;  &  that  euery  soule  should  be  subject  to  the  *higher  [*317.] 
powers,  Roui  13 :  1 ;  yea,  be  subject  to  eixery  ordinance  of  man  for  the 
Lords  sake,  1  Pee?  2 :  13,  &  yeeld  honnor  &  reuerence  or  feare  to  such  as 
are  in  autlioritje,  Prou  24 :  21  ;  1  Pet  2 :  17 ;  &  forbeare  all  cursing  &  revil- 
ing &  evill  speeches  touching  such  persons,  Exod  22  :  28  ;  Eclesiast  10  :  20  ; 
Ti?  3:2;  Acts  23 :  5  ;  &  accordingly  good  men  haue  beene  wont  to  behaue 
themselves  w*  gestures  &  speeches  of  reuerence  &  honnor  towards  superiors 
in  place  &  power,  as  Abraham  bowed  doune  himself  to  the  Hittites,  Gene 
23  :  7,  12  ;  Jacob  &  his  wives  &  children  unto  Esau,  Gene  33  :  3,  6,  7 ;  Jo- 
seph's brethren  vnto  Joseph,  being  governor  in  ^Egipt,  Genes  42  :  6  ;  &  43  :  26, 
28  ;  Joseph  to  his  father  Jacob,  Geii  48 :  12 ;  Moses  to  his  father  in  lawe  Jethro, 
Exod.  18:7;  Ruth  to  Boaz,  Ruth  2:10;  Dauid  to  Saul,  1  Sain  24  :  6  ;  Abigal, 
Bathsheba,  &  the  prophet  Nathan  to  King  Dauid,  1  Saiu  25  :  25  ;  1  Kings  1 : 
16,  23,  3 1  ;  w""  others  that  might  be  added.  And  for  reviling  or  contemptu- 
ous speeches,  they  haue  binn  so  farre  therefrom  that  they  haue  spoken  to  & 
of  theire  superiors  w"*  termes  &  expressions  of  much  honor  &  reuerence,  as 
father,  1  Sam  19  :  3  ;  1  Kings  19 :  20 ;  &  2  :  2,  12 ;  master,  2  Kings  6  : 
15  ;  1  Sam  24  :  6  ;  lord,  Geii  33 :  13,  14  ;  1  Pet  3  :  6  ;  my  lord,  1  Saffl 
24 :  8  ;  Gen  44  :  18,  19,  20  ;  1  Sam  1 :  15,  26  ;  most  noble  Festus,  Acts 
26 :  25  ;  most  excellent  Theophilus,  Luke  1:3;  and  the  like :  that  servant 
of  Abrahams,  Geii  24,  doth  call  Abraham  by  the  terme  &  title  of  master,  a 
matter  of  twenty  times,  or  not  much  lesse,  in  that  one  chapter ;  and  on  the 
contrary,  it  is  noted  as  a  brand  &  reproach  of  false  teachers,  that  they 
despise  dominion  &  are  not  afrajd  to  speake  evill  of  dignitjes,  2  Pe?  2  :  10 ; 
Jude  8  ;  though  the  very  aingells  would  not  doe  so  vnto  the  divill,  2  Pee? 
2  :  11  ;  Jude  9.  Now,  it  is  well  knoune  that  the  practize  of  the  Quakers  is 
but  too  like  these  false  teachers  whom  the  apostles  speake  of,  &  that  they  are 
farre  from  giving  that  honnor  &  reuerence  to  magistrates  which  the  Lord  re- 
quireth,  &  good  men  haue  giucn  to  them,  but  on  the  contrary  shew 
contempt  against  them  in  theire  very  outward  gestures  &  behavioiu*,  & 
(some  of  them  at  least)  spare  not  to  belch  out  rajling  &  cursing  speeches. 
Wittnes  that  odjous,  cursing  letter  of  Humphi-ey  Norton  ;  and  if  so,  if  Abishaj 


388  THE    RECOIIDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OP 

may  be  judge,  they  are  worthy  to  dye ;  for  so  he  thought  of  Shimej  for  his 
contemptuous  carriage  &  cursing  speeches  against  Dauid,  2  Sara  16  :  9,  & 
19 :  31.  And  though  Dauid  at  that  tjme  did  forbeare  to  put  him  to  death, 
yet  he  giues  chardge  to  Solomon,  that  this  Shimej  hauing  cursed  him  w*''  such 
a  greivous  curse,  he  should  not  hold  him  guiltlesse,  but  bring  doune  his  hoarje 
head  to  the  graue  w"'  blood,  1  Kings  2 :  8,  9 ;  according  to  which  direction 
King  Solomon  caused  him  to  be  put  to  death,  Vers  44,  46. 

3.  Also,  in  this  stoiy  of  Solomon  &  Shimej,  1  Kings  2,  it  is  recorded 
how  Solomon  confined  Shiniei  to  Jerusalem,  chardging  him,  vpon  pajne  of 
death,  not  to  goe  out  thence,  &  telling  him  that  if  he  did  he  should  dye  for 
it,  which  confinement  when  Shimej  had  broken,  though  it  were  tlu-ee  yeares 
after,  &  vpon  an  occasion  that  might  seeme  to  haue  some  weight  in  it,  viz., 
to  fetch  againe  his  servants  that  were  runne  away  from  him,  yett  for  all  this, 
the  confinement  being  broken,  Solomon  would  not  spare  him,  but  putts  him 
to  death  ;  and  if  execution  of  death  be  lawfuU  for  breach  of  confinement,  may 
not  the  same  be  sajd  for  breach  of  bannishment  ?  Confinement,  of  the  two, 
may  seeme  to  be  much  sleighter,  because  in  this  a  man  is  Ijmited  to  one  place 
&  debarred  from  all  others,  whereas  in  bannishment  a  man  is  debarred  from 
no  place  but  one,  all  others  being  left  to  his  liberty ;  the  one  debarres  him 
from  all  places,  saue  that  it  giues  liberty  to  one  ;  the  other  giues  liberty  to  all 
places,  saue  that  it  restraines  from  one  ;  and  therefore  if  death  may  be  justly 
inflicted  vpon  breach  of  confinement,  much  more  for  returne  vpon  bannish- 
ment, which  is  these  Quakers  case. 

4.  There  is  no  man  that  is  possessed  of  house  or  land,  wherein  he  hath 
just  title  &  propriety  as  his  oune,  but  he  would  count  it  vnreasonably  injuri- 
ous that  another  who  had  no  authoritje  thereto  should  intrude  &  enter  into 
his  house  w">out  his,  the  ouno''%  consent ;  yea,  &  when  the  ouno""  doth  express- 
ly prohibitt  &  forbidd  the  same.  Wee  say,  when  the  man  that  so  presumes  to 
enter  hath  no  authoritje  thereto ;  for  if  it  were  a  connstable  or  other  officer 
legally  authorized,  such  an  one  might  indeed  enter,  notw">standing  the  house- 
holders dissent  or  charge  to  the  contrary  ;  but  for  them  that  haue  no  authoritje 
the  case  is  otherwise.     And  if  such  one  should  presume  to  enter  into  another 

[*318.1  mans  house  &  habitation,  he  might  justly  be  *impleaded  as  a  theife  or  an 
vsurper ;  &  if  in  case  of  such  violent  assault,  the  owno""  should,  se  defen- 
dendo,  slay  the  assaylant  &  intruder,  his  blood  would  be  vpon  his  oune  head. 
And  if  private  persons  may  in  case  shed  the  blood  of  such  intruders,  may  not 
the  like  be  graimted  to  them  that  ai-e  the  publicke  keepers  and  guardians  of 
the  coiiionwealth  ?  Haue  not  they  as  much  power  to  take  away  the  Hues  of 
such  as,  contrary  to  prohibition,  shall  jnvade  &  intrude  into  theire  publicke 


18  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  389 

possessions  or  territoijes  as  private  &  particcular  persons  to  deale  so  w"'  tliem  16  59. 
that,  w"'out  authoritjc,  shall  presume  to  enter  into  theire  private  &  particcular 
habitations  ?  -which  secnies  clearly  to  be  the  present  case  ;  for  who  cann  beleiue 
that  (Juakers  are  connstables  oucr  this  colonje,  to  intrude  themselves,  invade, 
&  enter,  whither  the  colonje  will  or  no,  yea,  &  notw"'standing  theire  expresse 
prohibition  to  the  contrary  ?  If  in  such  violent  &  bold  attempt  they  loose 
theire  Hues,  they  may  thank  themselves  as  the  blameable  cause  &  autho"  of 
theire  oune  death. 

5.  AVho  cann  make  quaestion  but  that  a  man  that  hath  children  &  family 
both  justly  may,  &  in  duty  ought  to,  preserve  them  of  his  chardge  (as  farre 
as  he  is  able)  from  the  daingerous  company  of  persons  infected  w"^  the  plague 
of  pestilence  or  other  contagious,  noysome,  &  mortall  diseases  ?  and  if  such 
persons  shall  offer  to  intrude  into  the  mans  house  amongst  his  children  &  ser- 
vants, notw"'standing  his  prohibition  &  warning  to  the  contrary,  &  thereby 
shall  jndainger  the  health  &  liues  of  them  of  the  familje,  cann  any  man 
doubt  but  that  in  such  cas*the  father  of  the  family,  in  defence  of  himself  & 
his,  may  w^stand  the  intrusion  of  such  infected  &  daingerous  persons,  &  if 
otherwise  he  cann  not  keepe  them  out,  may  kill  them  ?  Now,  in  Scriptui-e, 
corruption  in  minde  &  judgment  is  counted  a  great  infection  &  defilement, 
yea,  &  one  of  the  greatest ;  for  the  apostle,  saying  of  some  men  that  to  them 
there  is  nothing  pure,  giues  this  as  the  reason  of  it,  because  euen  theire 
minde  &  conscience  is  defiled.  Tit  1 :  15  ;  as  if  defilement  of  the  minde  did 
axgue  the  defilement  of  all,  &  that  in  such  case  there  was  nothing  pure ; 
euen  as  when  leprosie  was  in  the  head,  the  preist  must  pronounce  such  a  man 
Ttterly  vncleane,  sith  the  plague  was  in  his  head,  Levitt  13 :  44.  And  it  is 
the  Lords  coiiiand  that  such  corrupt  persons  be  not  receaved  into  house,  2 
John  10,  which  plainly  enough  impljes  that  the  householder  hath  power  to 
keepe  them  out,  &  y'  it  was  not  in  theire  power  to  come  in  if  they  pleased, 
whither  the  householder  would  or  no.  And  if  the  father  of  a  particcular  family 
may  thus  defend  his  children  and  household,  may  not  magistrates  doe  the  like 
for  theire  subjects,  they  being  nursing  fathers  &  nursing  mothers  by  the  ac- 
count of  God  in  Holy  Scripture  ?  Isaj :  49 :  23'^.  Is  it  not  cleare,  y*  if  the 
father  in  the  family  must  keepe  them  out  off  his  house,  the  father  in  the 
comonwealth  must  keepe  them  out  of  his  jiuisdiction  ?  And  if  sheepe  & 
lambes  cannot  be  preserved  from  the  dainger  of  woolves,  but  the  woolves  will 
breake  in  amongst  them,  it  is  easy  to  see  what  the  shephard  or  keeper  of  the 
sheepe  may  lawfully  doe  in  such  a  case. 

6.  Itt  was  the  coiiiandment  of  the  Lord  Jesus  Christ  vnto  his  disciples,  that 
when  they  were  persecuted  in  one  citty,  they  should  flee  into  another.  Math 


390 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


[*319.] 


Fenc  about  y« 
prison  &  house 
of  correction. 


Warrant  for  y" 
y* lodged  y« 
Quakers,  &c. 


Pcaselys  pro- 
hibition. 


10 :  23 ;  &  accordingly  it  was  his  oiine  practise  so  to  doe  many  a  tjme,  both 
when  he  was  a  child,  Math  13:  14,  &  afterwards,  12:  15;  Joh  7:  1  &  8,  last, 
&  10:  39  ;  and  so  was  also  the  practise  of  the  saints.  Wittncs  what  is  written 
of  Jacob,  Gen  27:  42,  43,  &  28:  5;  of  Moses,  Exod  2:  14,  15;  of  Eljas,  1 
Kings  19:  3;  of  Paul,  Acts  9:  24,  25,  29,  30,  &  17:  13,  14;  &  of  the 
apostle.  Acts  14 :  4,  5,  &  others,  who,  when  they  haue  beene  persecuted, 
haue  fled  away  for  theire  oune  safety  ;  and  reason  requu-es  that  when  men 
haue  liberty  vnto  it,  they  should  not  refuse  so  to  doe,  because  otherwise  they 
will  be  guilty  of  tempting  God,  &  of  incurring  theire  oune  hurt,  as  having  a 
foire  way  open  for  the  avoyding  thereof,  but  they  needelessly  expose  themselves 
thereto.  If,  therefore,  that  which  is  donne  against  Quakers  in  this  jurisdiction 
were  indeed  persecution,  as  they  account  of  it,  (though  in  trueth  it  is  not  so, 
but  the  due  ministration  of  justice ;  but  suppose  it  were  as  they  thinke  it  to  be,) 
what  spirit  may  they  be  thought  to  be  acted  &  led  by,  who  are  in  theire  act- 
ings so  contrary  to  the  coinandment  &  example  of  Christ  &  of  *his  saints  in 
the  case  of  persecusion,  which  these  men  suppose  to  be  theire  case  ?  Plaine 
enough  it  is,  that  if  theire  case  were  the  same,  theire  actings  are  not  the  same, 
but  quite  contrary,  so  that  Christ  and  his  saints  were  led  by  one  spirit,  and 
those  people  by  another ;  for  rather  then  they  would  not  shew  theire  contempt 
of  authoritje,  and  make  disturbance  amongst  his  people,  they  choose  to  goe 
contrary  to  the  expresse  directions  of  Jesus  Christ,  &  the  approoved  examples 
of  his  saints,  although  it  be  to  the  hazard  &  perrill  of  theire  oune  Hues. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  there  shall  be  a  sufficjent  fence  erected  about  the 
coiiion  prison,  in  Boston,  &  house  of  correction,  such  as  may  debarre  persons 
from  conversing  w"'  the  prisoners,  &  the  charge  thereof  to  ^  borne  half  by  the 
county  of  Suffolke  &  the  other  halfe  by  the  countrje ;  y*  the  Tresurer  of  the 
county  of  Suffolke  see  the  same  effected. 

The  Court,  vnderstanding  that  seuerall  inhabitants  of  this  jurisdicon 
haue  lodged  the  Quakers  now  in  prison,  doe  order,  that  the  secretary  issue  out 
a  warrant  to  the  seuerall  persons,  &  send  the  same  by  a  messenger  of  purpose 
to  bring  them  all  w"'  speede  to  this  Court,  to  ans''  for  theire  offence  therein. 

The  Coiu-t,  bailing  considered  of  &  given  ans''  to  the  petitions  of  the 
inhabitants  of  Salisbury,  calling  to  minde  the  aff"ront  that  Joseph  Peasely  put 
on  this  Courts  judgment  &  order  in  the  yeare  ffifFty  eight,  by  not  only  con- 
tinewing  his  preaching  amongst  the  inhabitants  of  the  new  toune  at  Salisbury, 
notw"'standing  this  Courts  injunction  to  the  contrary,  but  refusing  to  come  to 
ans''  for  his  contempt  of  the  Courts  order,  &  vnderstanding  the  County  Court 
at  Salisbury  only  fined  him  fine  shillings  for  his  absence,  weekely,  as  they  did 
others,  &  still  that  he  contjnews  preaching  there  as  frequently  as  before  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  391 

Courts  order,  &  that  also,  as  ^  haue  biun  informed,  against  the  advise  of  the      1  G  5  9. 
church  whereof  he  is  a  member,  and  that  his  preaching  there  (being  very    "       *    ~^ 
weake  &  vnfitt  for  so  great  a  worke)  doth  rather  encrease  then  lessen  the  con- 
tentions there,  doe  order,  that  the  sajd  Joseph  Peasely  be  forthwith,  by  order 
from  this  Court,  forbidden  to  preach  any  more  in  any  part  of  this  jurisdiction, 
till  he  giue  full  sattisfaction  to  this  Court  for  what  hath  binn  past. 

Itt  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  the  Tresurer  shall  &  hereby  is  im-  Tresurer  to  pay 
powred  to  disburse  out  of  the  treasury  what  shall  be  necessary  tending  towards 
the  printing  of  the  lawes  vnto  Samuell  Greene,  referring  to  his  paynes  therein 
or  otherwise. 

Whereas  Christopher  Holder,  a  Quaker,  hath  suffered  what  the  lawe  for-  Holders  sen- 
merly  appointed,  after  his  being  sent  to  England,  w"'out  punishment,  presump-  .^J"^  "^  *"' 
tuously  coming  into  this  jurisdiction  w^'out  leaue  first  obtajned,  the  Court  judg- 
eth  it  meete  to  sentence  him  to  banishment,  on  pajne  of  death,  in  case  he  be 
found  w^'in  this  jurisdiction  three  dajes  after  the  next  shipp  now  bound  from 
hence  to  England  be  departed  from  this  harbor,  &  betweene  this  &  the  shipps  de- 
parture, w""  the  keeper,  at  his  oune  chardge,  he  shall  haue  liberty  one  day  in  a 
weeke  to  goe  about  his  buisnes ;  and  in  case  he  shall  choose  to  goe  out  of  this 
jurisdiction  sooner,  on  the  poenalty  of  the  sentence  aforesajd,  he  sliall,  by 
order  from  the  Gouerno''  or  Deputy  Go9,  be  dischardged  the  prison,  so  as  he  stay 
not  aboue  three  dajes  after  his  dischardg  from  the  prison  in  this  jurisdiction. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Eljazar  Lusher  &  M"-  Willjam  Parkes  shall  &      [*320.] 
hereby  are  impowred  a  coiiiittee  to  joyne  w"'  Capt  Edward  Johnson  (who  is  '"'''p'  ^*"- 

Johnson  sur- 

chosen  by  this  Court  to  be  the  survejor  generall)  to  take  the  last  survejor  gen-  Tojor  gen.  & 
eralls  accoimt,  &  to  present  the  same  to  the  Court  w"'all  convenient  speede.  ' 

The  Court,  considering  that  the  secretary  hath  served  the  countrje  for  Secretarys  sal- 
many  yeeres  in  that  place,  whose  tjme  hath  altogether  binn  taken  vp  w""  the  ;,„„ 
weighty  occasions  of  the  countrje,  which  haue  becne  &  are  incumbent  on  him, 
(the  neglect  whereof  would  be  an  ineuitable  &  great  prejudice  to  the  pub- 
lique,)  and  himself  oft  times  forced  to  hire  a  clarke  to  hclpe  him,  which  hath 
cost  him  some  yeares  twenty  pounds  p  annu,  and  euery  yeere  spending  of  his 
oune  estate  a  considerable  soiiie  beyond  what  his  estate  will  beare,  nor  is  it  for 
the  honnor  of  the  country  that  such  an  officer,  so  necessary,  who  hath  also  binn 
found  faithfuU  &  able  in  the  dischardg  of  the  trust  coiiiitted  to  him,  should 
want  due  encouragement,  doe  therefore  order,  that  the  present  secretary  shall 
haue,  from  the  eleventh  of  May  last,  the  seine  of  sixty  pounds  p  annu  for  his 
sallery,  to  continew  yearely  vntill  this  Court  shall  order  &  pro-\'idc  some  other 
mccte  recompence. 

In  the  case  now  depending  betweene  'M'  Edward  Lane  and  M"  Anna, 


392 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


10  50. 

>- — , . 

18  October. 
Courts  judg- 
ment in  M' 
Lanes  case. 


[*321.] 


tlie  late  wife  to  Capt  Robert  Keayne,  itt  is  ordered,  that  a  coiiiittee  be  chosen 
and  impowred  by  this  Court  to  put  a  finall  issue,  and  to  that  end  shall  be 
authorized  to  examine  the  accomjit  of  the  sajd  Lane,  what  hath  binn  by  him 
received,  and  also  how  much  he  hath  necessaryly  disbursed  or  expended  in 
paying  legatjes,  building  or  repajring  the  houses,  and  how  much  the  estate 
hath  binn  advansed  by  such  expences,  and  also  what  els  hath  binn  lajd  out  in 
any  other  way,  referring  to  the  estate,  and  the  same  to  allow  &  approove  off 
so  farr  as  they  shall  see  it  just  &  fequall,  &  so  farre  as  the  sajd  Lane  shall  be 
creditor  to  the  estate,  to  determine  and  conclude  not  only  how  much  he  shall 
be  allowed,  but  also  in  what  it  shallbe  pajd,  &  the  same  to  sett  out,  apprize,  & 
deliuer  vnto  him,  this  Court  judging  the  sajd  Edward  Lane  disingaged  of  all 
his  bonds  &  obligations  betweene  him  &  the  sajd  M™  Cole  referring  to  his  ex- 
eccutorshipp,  and  that  he  is  also  dischardged  of  his  execcutorshipp  respecting 
the  estate  of  the  sajd  Capt  Keayne  ;  and  it  is  left  to  the  ouerseeres  of  the  will 
to  nominat  such  others  in  his  roome  as  they  shall  judge  meete,  &  shall  be 
approoved  of  this  Court,  to  pay  such  legacjes  as  are  yett  vnpajd,  &  to  take 
chardge  of  the  estate,  to  see  it  be  disposed  of  according  to  the  will  of  the  tes- 
tator, and  the  chardg  of  this  and  the  former  coiiiittee  to  be  pajd  out  of  the 
estate  ;  the  coinissioners  to  be  chosen  by  the  whole  Court  mett  together.  The 
whole  Court  mett  together,  by  tlieire  vote,  ordered,  — 

1.  First,  that  Edward  Lane  shallbe  pajd  sixe  hundred  &  fifty  pounds 
sterling  in  marchantable  beife,  j^orke,  pease,  wheate,  barley,  and  Indian  come, 
of  each  proportionable,  or  otherwajes  to  his  sattisfaction. 

S'^'.  That  Edward  Lane  shall  receive  of  Sarjant  Eldred  the  two  yeares 
rents  for  the  farme  &  stocke  at  E-umney  Marsh. 

3'^.  That  he  shall  haue  all  the  rents  of  the  houses  in  Boston  *for  two 
yeares,  which  will  be  expired  the  seventh  of  December  next,  the  house  M" 
Cole  Hues  in  excepted,  and  also  that  good  securitje  be  giuen  him  for  the  pay- 
ment of  the  sixe  hundred  &  fifty  pounds  aboue  expressed,  and  also  that  Sam- 
uel Eldreds  securitje  he  hath  and  is  to  giue  may  be  for  the  secuiitje  of  his 
rent  for  the  two  yeares  rent  aboue  expressed ;  and  it  is  further  ordered,  that 
the  aboue  mentioned  sixe  hundred  and  fifty  pounds  be  pajd  M''  Lane,  in  such 
pay  as  is  aboue  mentioned,  once  w*''in  sixe  moneths,  &  in  case  it  be  not  pajd 
■w*''in  y*  time,  he  shallbe  allowed  vse  for  y*  same  to  y"  end  of  other  sixe  months, 
&  in  case  it  be  not  pajd  w^'in  twelve  months.  It  shallbe  lawfull  for  the  sajd 
Edward  Lane  to  sell  two  thirds  in  the  new  house,  and  two  thirds  in  the  old 
house  &  yards,  and  sattisfy  himself  the  sajd  soiiie  of  sixe  hundred  &  fifty 
pounds  as  abouesajd,  the  sajd  two  thirds  of  the  sajd  houses  &  yards  being 
made  ouer  as  his  securitje  for  the  payment  of  the  same ;  and  it  is  ordered. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY   IN   NEW   ENGLAND.  393 

that  the  sajd  Edward  Lane  forthwith  deliuer  vp  all  the  lands  &  houses,  hookas      16  5  9. 
of  acconipts,  bonds,  bills,  &  all  other  writtings,  stocke  of  catle,  &  what    else  '' 

18  October. 

ho  liath  in  his  possession  belonging  to  the  estate  of  the  sajd  Capt  Keayne,  to 
tlie  ouersecrs  ;  and  it  is  ordered,  that  M"'^  Cole  forthwith  bring  into  this  Court 
&  deliuer  vp  all  the  bonds  wherein  M''  Lane  stood  bound  to  the  sajd  M"  Cole, 
formerly  Keayne,  to  be  cancelled ;  so  also  that  the  secretary  bring  in  the 
bond  of  a  thousand  pounds  that  the  sajd  Edward  Lane  stands  bound  to  him  & 
Caf>?  Johnson  for  Anna  Keaynes,  Juii,  joincture. 

The  Court  having  pervsed  &  considered  the  petitions  presented  to  this  Courts  aus»  to 
Coiu't  by  the  inhabitants  of  Salisbury,  and  theire  respective  pleas  therein  con-  petition. 
tejned,  as,  1.  Whereas  the  mjnor  part  pleadeth  that  the  major  part  haue  donn 
them  wrong  in  discouraging  &  weakning  the  hands  &  hart  of  theire  dears 
paste"'  the  Reuerend  M"^  Worcester,  by  voting  a  negative  to  what  they  had  for- 
merly voted  an  affirmative,  &  by  passing  a  vote  of  thirty  pounds  for  his  half 
yeares  due,  when  before  they  had  voted  him  eighty  p  anii ;  and  in  ans''  thereto 
the  majo''  part  of  the  toune  &  church  doe  plead,  1.  That  legall  notice  of  the 
meeting  where  such  conclusion  was  made  was  not  given  to  y"  whole  ;  2.  That 
voting  for  thirty  pounds  y"  half  yeere  hindereth  not  his  having  eighty  poiinds  p 
aiium  ;  3.  That  such  promise,  though  graunted  to  be  legall,  yet  was  not  binding 
for  more  then  a  yeere  ;  4.  That  they  are  as  -nilling  as  theire  brethren  to  giue 
theire  reflend  pastor  all  due  incouragement,  only  they  account  it  vnreasonable  to 
be  forced  therevnto  by  the  irregular  provocations  of  the  mine""  part.  All  w"'' 
hauing  binn  considered,  together  w"'  the  evidences  presented  by  the  mine'' 
parte,  shewing  the  fullnes  &  freenes  of  y*  sajd  engagement,  &  the  mu.tuall  re- 
ceiving &  rejoycing  each  in  other  therevpon,  in  the  presenc  of  the  Eeuer- 
end  M"'  Cobbett  &  M''  Phillips,  they  being  instrumentall  therein  &  much 
rejoyced  thereat,  as  appeares  by  a  letter  exhibbited  in  Court  vnder  M'  Cob- 
bets  hand,  although  (in  exact  formallity  &  strictnes  of  lawe)  not  charging  those 
who  voted  that  they  were  not  bound  to  the  performance  of  the  sajd  engage- 
ment w"i  breach  of  couenant ;  yet  nefithelesse,  hauing  duely  considered  the 
freenes  &  fullnes  of  the  sajd  engagement  by  so  considerable  a  pte  of  the  toune, 
&  none  considerably  opposing  ,•  and  not  only  so,  but  also  theire  abillity,  thro 
Gods  blessing,  to  perform  the  same,  as  also  theire  pasto''s  necessitje  of  so 
much  for  y*  supply  of  his  family  w""  those  things  that  are  honest,  this  Court 
doth  declare  that  regularly  the  inhabitants  aforesajd  may  not  diminish  any  part 
of  the  sajd  eighty  pounds  p  annu.  And  for  the  future,  the  inhabitants  of  the 
sajd  toune  hauing  in  theire  peticbns  manifested  a  great  deale  of  loue  &  respect 
to  theire  deare  paste',  &  theire  readines  to  contribute  what  they  may,  according  to 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  50 


/ 


394 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1659. 

> Y 

18  October. 

[*322.] 


Ans'  to  Tho. 

Holbrooks 

peticon. 


Courts  judg- 
ment in  M' 
Duncans  case. 


M'Bradstreets, 
Maj.Gen.  Den- 
nison,  &  M' 
Symonds 
fannes. 


thelre  ablllitje,  for  his  future  encouragement  still  to  continew  w*  tliem,  (w"'out 
respect  to  any  pre  ingagement,)  this  Court  further  declares,  that  they  ex- 
pect answerable  performance  in  such  wise  as  amongst  *themselves  they  may 
most  voluntarily  &  cordially  agree  together  vpon. 

2'y.  And  whereas  they  doe  joinctly  peticon  that  M''  Worcester  may  not 
be  enjoyned  to  travaile  monethly  to  the  new  toune,  this  Court  judgeth  it  meete 
to  leaue  it  w*  the  church  &  M"'  Worcester  to  act  therein  as  the  Lord  shall 
guide  them. 

3.  And  whereas  the  one  part  pleadeth  that  the  new  toune  may  be  dis- 
missed from  contributing  to  the  ministry  at  the  old  toune,  &  that  they  may 
haue  liberty  to  w*'^drawe  themselves  from  the  publicque  ministry  of  the  word 
now  dispensed  amongst  them,  it  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  vntill  they  be 
provided  of  an  able  minister,  that  they  continew  to  be  helpfuU  in  the  vphold- 
ing  of  theire  present  pastor,  and  that  they  constantly  attend  thereto,  (provi- 
dences of  the  Lord  by  vnseasonable  weather  obstructing  them  excepted,) 
forbearing  to  content  themselves  w'''  private  helpes,  whiles  the  Lord  is  pleased 
to  continew  so  bright  a  starre  in  theire  candlesticke,  least  our  wantones  vnder 
&  wearynes  of  our  present  vnparraleld  enjoyments  doe  justly  provoke  the 
Lord  to  deprive  vs  thereof. 

In  ans"^  to  the  petition  of  Tho  Holbrooke,  humbly  desiring  this  Courts 
favo"^  to  graunt  him  a  smale  corner  of  land  lying  on  the  north  side  of  Charles 
Eiuer,  &  adjoyning  to  a  parcell  of  land  he  lately  purchased  there,  the  Court 
judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  his  request,  so  as  the  land  desired  exceed  not 
fifty  acres,  nor  interfere  w"'  any  former  graunt,  nor  the  Indian  plantation. 

In  the  case  betweene  Mahalaleells  Munings  &  Nathaniell  &  Peter  Duncan, 
coming  to  this  Court  by  the  Magis'"  refusing  the  verdict  of  y"  jury,  at  the 
County  Court  of  Boston,  in  July  last,  the  Comt,  on  a  full  hearing  of  all  the 
evidences  in  the  case  produced,  doe  find  the  sajd  Nathaniell  &  Peter  Duncan 
to  be  indebted  to  the  sajd  Munings  on  a  just  account  the  soiiie  of  fine  hundred 
&  sixty  pounds  twelve  shillings,  and  doe  order  the  same  to  be  pajd  to  the  sajd 
Munings,  together  w*^"^  eight"  p  cen?  for  eight  moneth  forbearance,  and 
three  pounds  three  shilHngs  costs  of  Court ;  provided,  that  what  shall  appeare 
to  be  already  pajd  of  the  aforesajd  some  shallbe  deducted  ;  provided  also,  that 
what  euer  was  deliuered  to  the  sajd  M'  Duncans  wife  by  order  from  the  church 
of  Boston,  or  shall  be  found  in  his  hands,  of  any  other  mens  estate,  &  sufii- 
cijently  prooved  before  any  County  Court  so  to  be,  shall  not  be  Ijable  to  the 
execution. 

Graunted  to  M'  Bradstreet  his  seven  hundi'ed  acres,  and  to  Majo''  Gen" 
Denison  his  fine  hundred  acres,  w"^*"  were  foi-merly  graunted  on  this  side  the 


18  October 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND,  395 

Riuer  of  Conecticott,  against  Northampton,  to  lye  on  the  west  side  of  the      1  G  5  9. 

sajd  riuer,  about  sixe  miles  aboue  Northampton,  to  beginne  either  at  a  brookc 

or  at  a  walnut  tree,  being  forked  from  the  roote,  about  halfe  a  mile  from  the 

sajd  brooke,  as  they  shall  choose  before  the  next  Generall  Court  in  October, 

and  from  the  sajd  brooke  or  walnut  tree  to  extend  vp  the  Riuer  of  Conecticott 

not  exceeding  one  miles  three  quarters  vpon  a  streight  Ijne,  and  then  vpon  a 

square  or  right  angle  to  runne  from  the  riuer  into  the  woods  so  many  pole  as 

shall  make  vp  theire  aforesajd  graunt.     It  is  also  graunted  that  M""  Symonds 

shall  haue  his  hrmdred  &  sixty  acres  next  aboue  the  aboue  mentioned  gent", 

eighty  pole  vp  by  the  riuers  side,  and  that  these  farmes  shall  belong  to  the 

new   toune    there,    respecting    piiblicke    chardges,    referring    to    toune    or 

countrjc. 

*The  ouerseers  of  Cap?  Keaynes  will  are  heereby  empowred  to  take  the      [*323.] 
estate  into  theire  hands,  &  to  sell  or  dispose  thereof,  for  speedy  payment  of  the   ^^  ■  ^  "">■'  *^- 

OQseei-s  power 

legatjes,  according  to  the  will,  as  they  shall  judge  &  determine,  provided  to  dispose  of 
theire  determination  be  approoved  by  INIajo''  Atherton,  M''  Russell,  M'  Dan-  ^^^^^^  ^5°^^ 
forth,  Majo''  Hauthorne,  M''  Stoddard,  &  Left  Cooke,  or  the  majo''  part  of 
them,  who  are  appointed  by  this  Court  as  a  coiiilttee  to  joyne  w"'  the  ouerseers 
in  interpretation  of  the  will  respecting  legacies  to  his  relation ;  &  the  conclu- 
sion agreed  on  by  the  majo"^  parte  of  the  ouerseers  &  of  the  sajd  coinittee 
shall  be  a  finall  issue  of  all  causes  or  actions  that  haue  or  may  arise  concerning 
legacjes  bequeathed  by  the  sajd  will. 

On  the  desire  of  M™  Anne  Keayne,  Junio'',  the  Court  doth  also  appoint  M"  Anna 
M'  Symon  Bradstreet  &  Majo"^  Geil  Dennison  to  be  her  guardians,  &  M"^  guardians. 
Edward  Lane,  who  was  formerly  allowed,  is  hereby  dischardged,  and  enjoyned 
to  give  an  account  of  his  acting  as  guardian  during  his  contjnuance,  and  to 
retoui-ne  all  papers  &  writings  belonging  vnto  the  sajd  M"'^  Anne  Keayne  in 
refferenc  to  hir  ffathers  will. 

In   ans"^  to  the   petioon  of  Tho   Clarke,  W™   Payne,  Tho   Lake,  John  Courts  ans'  to 
Richards,  George  Corwin,  &  "Walker  Princ,  in  behalfe  of  themselves  &  com-  Ij.^^^  ciarke, 
pany,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  order  that  a  present  clajme  be  made  of  ~^^j^^^\- 
our  just  rights  vpon  Hudsons  Riuer,  neere  the  Port  of  Awrania,  by  a  letter  in  referenc  to 

„  -r-v-i  -i.-ii-i'i  1  -ij     Hudson  Riuer, 

from  this  Court  to  the  Dutch  gouerno'',  desirmg  that  tree  liberty  be  permitted,  g.~ 
according  to  the  custome  of  nations,  by  theire  fForts,  to  or  from  such  toune  or 
tonnes  as  shall  be  erected  there  w^in  our  jurisdiction,  &  order  the  sajd  letter 
to  be  deliuered  to  Majo''  W"  Hauthorne  &  M'  John  Richards,  whom  this  Court 
hath  appointed  messengers  for  that  end  from  this  Court,  &  also  from  the  com- 
pany. And  itt  is  further  graunted  by  this  Court,  that  the  trade  w'l'in  fiueteene 
miles  of  the  sajd  riuer  shall  be  setled  only  on  the  peticSners  &  company,  for 


396  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1659.      twelve  yeares  now  next  ensuing,  and  to  haue  liberty  to  trade  such  coinoditjes 
'        ■"        '    as  the  Dutch  vsually  trade,  provided  that  any  freeman  of  this  jurisdiccbn  may 

12  November.  •oii-i/'i  i-ji  r^ 

come  m  &  be  admitted  of  that  company  betweene  this  and  the  next  uenerall 

Coiu-t  by  theire  allowance ;  the  sajd  messengers  carrying  the  Courts  letter  to 

y"  Dutch  gouerno''  at  the  id  companys  charge.     The  sajd  letter  is  in  the 

Courts  booke  of  letters. 

Courts  ans'  to  The  Court,  hauing  considered  of  the  peticons  of  M''  George  Cleaves,  M' 

Bonighton?       John  Bonighton,  M'  Richard  Foxwell,  &  M"'  Willjam  Phillips,  craving  the 

Foxweli,  &       belpe   of  this   Court  for   the   setling  theire  respective   interests   of  lands  & 

PhUUps  peti-  ^  or 

Con.  possessions  in  the  east  parts  of  this  jurisdiction,  doe  judge  meete  to  order, 

that  theire  respective   cases  &  complaints,  for  a  finall  issue,  be  referred  to 

Majo""  Humphrey  Atharton,  Capt  Thomas  Sauage,  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  & 

Capt  Tho  Clarke,  or  any  three  of  them,  who  are  hereby  chosen  &  comission- 

ated  by  this  Court  to  heare  &  determine  the  seuerall  differences  of  the  sajd 

parties,  as  in  theire  wisdome  they  shall  judge  most  meete,  hereby  impowring 

the  sajd  comittee  to  appoint  the  time  &  place  of  theire  meeting,  as  they  shall 

judge  most  convenient,  (all  persons  concerned  therein  being  hereby  enjoyned 

to  attend  the  same,)  and  to  send  for  partjes  &  wittnesses,  &  examine  theire 

seuerall  complaints  according  to  law,  provided  the    complajnants  be   at  the 

chardge  of  procuring  the  attendanc,  &  sattisfy  the  chardges  of  the  coiuittee, 

&  that  retourne  be  made  by  the  coiSittee  to  the  next  Generall  Court  after 

theire  determination. 

Ans'  to  M"  In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Martha  Coggan,  it  is  ordered,  the  sajd  Mf^ 

^^oggans  pe  i-    ]^^j.(.j^j^  Coggan  haue  liberty  to  sell  the  house  mentioned  in  the  petition,  for 

the  pajment  of  debts,  as  is  desired,  provided  y'  M"  Coggan  giue  bond,  w"" 

security,  to  pay  the  heires  of  the  sajd  John  Wooddey,  i.  c.,  his  brothers  or 

heires,  y*  soine  of  thirty  five  pounds  after  y"  death  of  M'^^  Eobbinson,  formerly 

y®  relict  of  Jn°  Wooddey,  M"'  Jn°  Coggan  in  his  will  hauing   given  M" 

Eobbinson  full  sattisfaction  for  what  she  might  clajme  to  the  other  pai-ts   of 

the  seuenty  pounds. 

[*324.]  *In  ans"^  to  y'  request  of  the  ffreemen  of  Dedham,  it  is  ordered,  y'  Capt 

Capt  Lusher  to  j^jjazer  Lusher  shall  &  hereby  is  impowred  to  giue  oaths,  solemnize  mar- 
take  oathes, 
&c.  riages,  &  take  acknowledgments  of  deeds  in  Dedham. 

Ans' to  Arthur  In  ans'  to   the  peticbu  of  Arthur   Mason,  the   Court,  considering  the 

.  as<"^s  peti-     gj-o^jj^s  of  his  request,  i.  e.,  y"  losse  of  his  arme,  &  so  his  inabillity  to  pcui-e 

maintenance  for  his  family,  judg  meete  to  graunt  liim  one  hundred  acres  of 

land,  to  be  lajd  out  adjoyning  to  such  as  be  akeady  lajd  out,  by  order  of  this 

Court. 

In  ans'  to  y°  peticon  of  Richard  Cutter  &  Eljjah  Corlett,  on  his  behalfe, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  397 

the  Court,  hauing  considered  the  pertlcculars  in  this  peticon,  judge  meetc  to      165  9. 
order,  that  the  Coimty  Court  for  jNIidleses,  who  liad  the  heariag  of  the  peticon-    ^~     ^^        ' 
ers  case,  &  are  best  able  to  iudge  of  the  demerritts  thereof,  shall  haue  liberty  . 

'  JO  '  J    ^„g,  Jo  Rich. 

to  make  such  abatement  of  his  fines  as  to  them  shall  seeme  meete,  any  lawe  Cutters  peti- 
or  custom  to  the  contrary  notw"^standing ;  and  also,  that  the  petic6ner  haue 
his  request  graunted  for  a  revisall  of  that  act  whereby  he  is  recorded  for  a 
Ijar,  which  will  tend  to  his  clearing  or  to  his  fui'ther  conviction. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  thanks  of  this  Court  be  retourned  to  the  Eeuerend  M'Jn'Nortona 
M'  John  Norton  (by  the  honnored  Gouernor)  for  liis  great  pajnes  &  worthy 
labors  in  y*  tractate  he  di-ew  vp,  &  by  order  of  this  Court  hath  binn  printed, 
wherein  the  daingerous  errors  of  the  Quakers  is  fully  refuted  and  discouered, 
and  to  acquaint  him  that  this  Court  hath  giuen  him  fine  hundred  acres  of  land, 
where  it  is  to  be  found  free  from  other  graunts,  to  be  lajd  out  in  one  or  two 
places  at  his  chojce,  as  a  smale  recompence  for  his  pajnes  therein. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  M'  Edward  Tyng,  the  Court,  hauing  considered  Ans'to  M' 
of  his  request  &  his  readjnes  to  be  servicable  at  all  tjnies  to  the  good  of  this 
coinonwealth,  judge  meete  to  graunt  him  two  hundred  &  fiffty  acres  of  land, 
to  be  lajd  out  adjoyning  to  such  lands  as  haue  binn  taken  vp  by  order  of  this 
Coiut. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Henry  Neale,  humbly  craving  releife  in  relation  to  aus'  to  Hen. 
some  injury  by  him  sustejned  by  the  country  highway  being  remooved,  &6,  the     ^  *  peticon. 
Coiu-t,  being  ignorant  of  former  proceedings  concerning  the  premisses,  and  of 
w'  ground  the  peticoner  hath  to  complajne,  doe  order,  that  the  peticoner  be 
referred  for  releife  to  the  County  Court  of*  y'  sheiie,  in  ordinary  processe  of 
lawe. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  John  Tincker,  itt  is  ordered,  that  M'  Thomas  Ans'  to  Jn» 
Danforth,  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  Sc  Ephrajm  Child  shall  be  a  coiuittec  to  ex-  J^  "^  ^^ '" 
amine  the  particculars  mentioned  in  id  peticon,  &  make  retourne  of  what  they 
finde  to  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Daniell  Weld  &  Eljjah  Corlett,  schoolem'^,  the  Ans-  to  M' 

.  .        ,  ^       p  Welds  &M' 

Court,  considering  the  vsefullnes  of  the  peticoners  in  an  imployment  ot  so  corietts  peti- 
comon  concernment  for  the  good  of  the  whole  country,  &  the  little  incourage-  '^""• 
ment  that  they  haue  had  from  theire  respective  tounes  for  theire  service  &  vn- 
weai-ied  pajnes  in  that  imployment,  doe  judge  meet  to  graunt  to  each  of  them 
two  hundred  acres  of  land,  to  be  taken  vp  adjoyning  to  such  lands  as  haue 
binn  already  graimted  &  lajd  out  by  order  of  this  Court. 

In  ans'  to  y"  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Dorchester,  the  Couit  judgeth  Ans'  to  Dor- 

/.  1       1   ■      1    •         <•   Chester  peti- 

it  meete  to  graunt  the  toune  of  Dorchester  a  thousand  acres  of  land  m  iejw  01   g^^ 
Thompsons  Island,  formerly  sett  a  pt  for  a  fi-ee  schoole  in  Dorchester,  but  by 


398  THE  KECOEDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1659.     judgment  of  y'  Court  given  to  M'^  John  Tompson,  &  y"  sajd  land  to  be  lajd 
'       ''        '    out  where  they  cann  find  it,  &  improouing  it  for  y^  bennefitt  of  sajd  schoole. 

12  November. 

[*3l25.]  *Lajd  out  to  M''  Richard  Russell,  Tresurer,  one  thousand  &  sixe  hundred 

Tresurer  Rus-   acres  of  land,  on  the  northerne  side  of  Merremacke  Riuer,  in  the  wildernesse, 

sells  1600  acres 

lajd  out  in  pt.    begining  right  ouer  against  Wajmesicke,  being  bounded  w"'  Beauer  Brooke 
tonstaii  '^^  ^^^  west,  Meiremacke  Riuer  on  the  south,  the  wildernesse  elswhere  sur- 

rounding, according  to  marked  trees,  as  is  more  fully  demonstrated  by  a  plott 
taken  of  the  same,  w'^''  is  on  file. 

By   JONATHAN   DANFORTH,    Survcjor. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approoves  of  this  retourne  of  land  lajd  out  as  being 
part  of  a  parcell  of  land  grauntcd  in  the  yeare  sixteene  lumdred  &  fiffty  to 
Robert  Saltonstall,  in  right  of  S'  Richard  Saltonstall,  for  fowcr  hundred 
pounds  lajd  out  by  him  in  y"  coiiion  stocke,  provided  that  M"'  Russell  shall  & 
is  hereby  engaged  to  secure  the  countrje  from  any  challenge  w*^**  shall  or 
maybe  made  to  the  land  herein  mentioned  by  the  heires  or  execcutors  of  y'  sd 
RoVt  Saltonstall,  or  any  other,  as  by  any  right  from  him. 

Courts  ans'  to  In  ans'  to  y"  peticbn  of  Gregory  Belchar,  it  is  ordered,  that  whereas  at 

charTpetiCon  ''^^  ^^^  session  of  this  Court  there  was  a  plantation  graunted  to  seuerall  of 
the  inhabitants  of  Braintry  where  they  could  finde  it  vngraunted  in  this  juris- 
diccbn,  that  the  peticoner  shall  be  accoinodated,  together  w"'  his  neighbo'^,  w"* 
such  a  proportion  of  land  as  shall  be  thought  meete  by  those  y'  haue  the  dis- 
pose thereof. 
Ans'  to  The.  lu  ans""  to  the  peticbn  of  Tho  Gleason,  the   Court,  having  pervsed  his 

easons  peticon,  doe  order,  that  the  County  Court  for  Midlesex,  who  had  the  hearing 

of  the  case,  shall  haue  liberty  to  make  such  abatement  of  the  peticoners  fines 
as  to  them  shall  seeme  reasonable,  any  lawe  or  custome  to  y^  contrarj'  not- 
w"'standing. 
Ans'  to  Jn»  lu  ans''  to  y'^  peticon  of  John  Prescott,  the  Court,  considering  the  grounds 

petTco'  ^  °^  ^^^  peticbn,  doe  judge  it  meete  to  graunt  him  one  hundred  acres  of  land,  to 

be  lajd  out  adjoyning  to  the  lands  that  are  lajd  out  by  order  of  this  Court  to 
Lancaster. 
Ans' to  Fan-  In  ans'  to  the  motion  &  request  of  Tho  Fanning,  the  Court,  hauing 

nmgs  request,  j^gj^j.^  (.j^g  (.^se,  and  Thomas  Bronning,  his  servant,  in  open  Court  acknowl- 
edging y'  ab'  a  moneth  since  he  gott  into  y^  house  of  Deacon  Symon  Stone 
&  stole  away  fifty  fower  shillings  in  money,  ordered  him  to  be  whipt  w"" 
twenty  stripes  well  lajd  on,  &  to  make  double  restitution. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  399 

Wee,  whose  names  are  here  vnder  written,  being  appointed  by  the  Generall  165  9. 
Court  &  impowred  to  lay  out  the  deviding  bounds  betweene  the  tounes  of  '  ''  "" 
Cape  Porpus,  Saco,  Scarborough,  &  Falmouth,  vpou  due  consideration  thereof, 
doe  determine  as  foUoweth :  Imp''.  That  the  dividing  bounds  betweene 
Cape  Porpus  &  Saco  shallbe  the  riuer  coiuonly  called  the  Little  Riuer,  next 
vuto  W""  Scadlocks  now  dwelling  house,  vnto  the  first  falls  of  the  sajd  riuer, 
&  from  thence  vpon  a  due  north  west  Ijne  into  the  country  vntill  eight  miles 
be  expired. 

2'y.    The  dividing  bounds  betweene  Sacoe  &  Scarborow  shallbe  that  riuer  Cape  Porpus, 
coinonly  called  the  Little  Riuer,  next  vnto  Scarborow,  &  from  the  mouth  of  ^'^^^  ^  j,^"/ 
the  sajd  riuer  shall  ruime  vpon  a  due  northwest  lyne  into  the  country,  vnto  ™o"tli  bounds. 
the  extent  of  eight  miles. 

S'y.    The    dividing    bounds    betweene    Scarborow    &   Falmouth    shallbe 

from  the  first  dividing  branches  of  Spurwincke  Riuer,  from  thence  to  runne 

vp  into  the  countrje  vpon  a  due  north  west  Ijne  vntill  eight  miles  be  extended, 

and  that  the  easterly  bounds  of  Falmouth  shall  extend  to  the  Clapboards 

Islands,  and  from  thence  shall  runne  vpon  a  west  Ijne  into  the  countrje  till 

eight  miles  be  expii-ed. 

NICO:   SHAPLEIGH, 

EDW:   RISHWORTH, 

ABRAHAM   PREBLE. 

The  Court  approoves  of  the  retourne  of  the  comissioners  in  reference  to 
y"^  bounds  aboue  exprest. 

Layd  out  for  M'  Deane  Winthrop  five  hundred  acres  of  land,  &  two  hun-  M'  Deane 
dred  for  Frauncis  Vernon,  as  it  abutteth  vpon  Meadfeild  lyne,  in  part  towards  ^p^es  and  200 
the  south,  &  a  stony  ridge  in  part,  and  Bo£;gestow  Brooke  in  part,  towards  Founds  \er- 
the  east  &  south  east,  and  vpon  a  pond  in  part  towards  the  west,  &  the  wast  out. 
lands  on  all  other  parts.     Aprill  1,  1659. 

By  me,  JOSHUA  FISHER. 

The  Court  approoves  of  this  retourne. 

*Lajd  out  to  Lef  ?  Peter  OHuer,  Cap?  James  Oliuer,  Capt  James  John-      [*326.] 
son,  &  Ensigne  John  Euered  one  thousand  acres  of  land  in  the  wildernesses  on     J""«  7,  59. 
the  northern  side  of  Merremake  Riuer,  lying  ab'  Nahamkege,  being  bounded  cap' James 
w""  INIerremake  Riuer  on  the  south  and  on  the  west,  the  wildernes  elswhere  O'"'^"''  "^^P' 

Johnson,  tn 

surrounding,  according  to   marked  trees,  as  by  a  plott  taken  of  y*  same  is  signe  Euered 

.  Vands  lajd  out. 

demonstrated,  &  is  on  file. 

By  JONATHAN   DANFORTH,  Surveyor. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approoves  of  this  returne. 


400  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1659.  Lajd  out  to  Cap?  Thomas  Sauage,  Capt  Frauncis  Norton,  Left  W""  Hud- 

^  son,  &  M'  Jeremiah  Houchin  one  thousand  acres  of  land  in  the  wildernesse 

12  November.  •  i         c    •»  r  i      -n 

Cap' Sauage,     °^  *^^   '^^^^  ®"'^  °^  Mcrremak  Rmer,  vpon    Samon    Brooke,    begining    at 
Norton,  Lef     Sagumskuffe,  and  so  riming  doune  the  riuer  or  brooke,  one  part  or  parcell 

Hudon,  &  M'  ^  -  '  ^  1 

Houchin  lands  of  the  same  conteyning  about  nine  hundred  thirty  fower  acres,  more  or  lesse ; 

laid  out.  -,  ^  T,  ^    .       .  .  .  ,  , 

also,  one  part  or  parceil  conteignmg  sixty  six  acres,  more  or  lesse,  nere  ad- 
joyning  there-vnto,  being  bounded  w"'  the  wildernesse  according  to  marked 
trees,  as  by  a  plott  taken  of  y*  same  is  more  fully  demonstrated,  &  is  on  file. 

By  me,  JONATHAN   DANFORTH,  Survejor. 
The  Court  approues  of  this  retourne. 

M'  Dummers  Lajd  out  to  M''  Richard  Dummer  eight  hundred  acres  of  land  in  the  wil- 

out.  dernes  on  the  northerne  side  of  Merremacke  Riuer,  begining  at  Weekasoake 

Brooke,  being  bounded  therewith  &  Merremak  Riuer  on  y''  west,  adjoyning 
to  farmes  lately  lajd  out  to  Peter  &  James  Oliuer,  &  some  others,  on  the 
south,  the  wildernesse  elswhere  siu-rounding  according  to  marked  trees,  as  by 
a  plott  taken  of  the  same  is  more  fully  demonstrated,  w"^""  is  on  file. 

By  JONATHAN   DANFORTH,  Surveyor. 

The  Court  approoues  of  this  retourne,  so  as  it  exceed  not  fiffly  acres 
aboue  the  soiiie  of  eight  hundred  acres. 

Ans'  to  Charis  In  ans'  to  the  petlcbn  of  Charles  Toune  &  Cambridge,  the  Court,  hauing 

Camb'  petii-on  Considered  the  grounds  of  this  peticon,  &  of  how  great  concernment  it  is  y' 
all  due  encouragement  be  given  thereto,  judge  meete  to  graunt  to  each  toune 
a  thousand  acres  of  land,  vpon  condicon  y*  they  foreuer  appropriate  it  to  that 
vse,  &  w"^in  three  yeers,  at  farthest,  lay  out  the  same,  &  put  it  on  improove- 
ment ;  &  in  case  that  they  faile  of  majnetajning  a  grammar  schoole  during  the 
sajd  tjme  they  «hall  so  doe,  the  next  gramar  schoole  of  w'  touuesoeuer  shall 
haue  the  sole  bennefitt  thereof. 

3  June,  59.  Lajd  out,  according  to  the  order  of  the  honnored  General!  Court,  May 

knr"*^'"^'  the  11*,  59,  the  farme  of  M'  Edmond  Rice,  of  Sudbury,  in  y"  place  appoint- 
ed by  y'=  Court,  that  is,  first  begining  at  a  hill  leaving  Conecticott  path  on  the 
north  or  northwesterly  of  it,  and  a  brooke  on  the  south  of  it,  &  two  hills  &  a 
litle  peece  of  meadow  on  the  east  of  it,  w"'  fiue  acres  of  meadow  lying  on  the 
east  side,  being  part  of  y"  same  graunt;  also  the  sajd  tract  of  land  being 
bounded  w""  the  wlldernes  on  the  west,  all  which  said  tract  of  land  conteineth 


1000  acres  of 
land  to  each. 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS   BAY   IN   NEW   ENGLAND.  40I 

eighty  acres,  being    survejed  &  measured   by  \s,  wliose    names    are  vnder      16  5  9. 

•written,  the  day  &  yeere  first  aboue  written.  *~    "*    "^ 

12  November. 
THOMAS  NOJES, 

JOHN  STONE. 

The  Coiu-t  approoues  of  y*  retourne. 

In  ans'  to  the  motion  of  Majo'^  Humphrey  Atherton,  that  -whereas  -f  Major  Ather- 
Genll  Court,  in  the  yeeres  fiffty,  &  sixteene  hundi-ed  fiffty  &  eight,  graunted  **"" '""'  *""' 
him  fiue  hundred  acres  of  land,  &  ordered  it  to  be  lajd  out  nere  Norwottock, 
W''  afterwards  was  ap^hended  to  be  fjudiciall  to  y'  plantacon,  at  the  request 
of  y*  Court,  he  yeilding  vp  his  interest  therein  for  y'  coinon  good,  now 
requesting  his  sd  farme,  w''^  such  addition  as  this  Court  sees  meet  to  graunt 
him,  may  be  layd  out  by  M''  Danforth,  or  his  order,  in  any  place  not  taken  vp 
by  order  of  this  Coui-t,  the  Court  grauhts  his  request,  &  graunts  him,  as  an 
addition  thereto,  two  hundred  acres,  w'^'^  seuen  hundred  acres  to  be  lajd  out  by 
M'  Danforth,  or  his  order,  as  is  desired.  , 

*In  ans'  to   the   peticon   of  Edward  Hutchinson,  atturney  to   Richard      [*  327.1 
Hutchinson,  humbly  craning  that  a  reveju  be  graunted  of  the  case  betweene  Ship  Exchange 

orGoodfellow 

him  &  Cap?  Thomas  Clarke,  concerning  the  eight  pt  of  the  ship  Exchange,  to  belong  to 
formerly  Goodfellow,  or  y"^  some  other  effectuall  course,  whereby  y''  id  Richard  gg. 
Hutchinson  may  be  releived,  &(3,  the  Court  graunts  his  request,  a  hearing  of 
the  case,  pvided  he  put  in  caution  to  beare  the  chardg  of  the  Coiut,  accord- 
ing to  law.  The  Court  hauing  heard  what  both  partjes  could  say,  the  whole 
Court,  mett  together,  voted  that  the  former  judgm'  of  this  Court,  giving  the 
shipp  Goodfellow  to  Cap?  Clarke,  is  hereby  reuerst,  this  Court  judging  the 
sajd  ship  to  be  M''  Hutchinsons,  &  graunted  y*  sajd  M""  Hutchinson,  as  costs 
for  chardges  of  tliis  Court,  seven  pounds  tenn  shillings,  &  for  his  oune 
chardges,  seven  pounds  fiue  shillings;  in  all  foureteene  pounds  fiueteene 
shillings. 

In  ans''  to  y*  petlc6n  of  George  Halsall,  humbly  desiring  that  Jane,  his  Courts  revers- 
wife,  lately  divorced  from    him  by  the   Court   of  Asistants,   1656,  may  be  Afistants" 
retourned  to  him,  &S,  the  Court,  on  a  hearing  of  the  matter  conteined  in  his  J"'^s™'  ^^' 

Joane  HalsaU. 

petition,  and  duly  considering  of  all  the  evidences  by  both  partjes  produced  in 
the  case,  doe  order,  that  the  judgment  of  the  sajd  Court  of  Asistants  in  reffer- 
ence  thereto  be  voyd,  and  that  the  sajd  George  Halsall  shall  haue  and  enjoy 
the  sajd  Joane  Halsal,  his  wife,  againe.  f  !^-  ^"'=''"* 

•>  '  >     o  &  Deacon 

In  the  case  depending  betweene  Richard  Brackett  &  Samuell  Basse,  of  Basse  ag'Fri 

.        ,       .  '  _      _  _  zell,  M'  An- 

Braintrje,  in  behalfe  of  the  toune,  plaintiff's,  against  John  Andrews  &  Benjamin  drews,  &c. 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  5 1 


402  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1659.      Phippeny,  defendants,  in  an  action  of  the  case  for  giving  John  Frizell  so 

■"  much  licquors  as  made  him  druncke,  &  occasioned  his  miserable  freizing,  the 

Court,  on  a  hearing  of  the  case  &  evidences,  doe  find  for  y^  defendants  costs 

of  Court. 

Ans'  to  New-  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  M"'  Edward  Woodman  &  other  inhabitants  of 

DGrv  136ti 

Neubury,  humbly  craving  the  favo'  of  this  Court  to  graunt  them  a  new  plan- 
tation on  Saco  Riuer,  westward  of  the  bounds  of  Saco,  &d,  the  Court  judgeth 
it  meete  to  graunt  the  peticoners  eight  miles  square  in  the  place  desired,  pro- 
vided the  giue  in  theire  resolutions,  as  is  exprest  in  theire  peticon,  in  one 
years  ensuing  this  date. 

M»  Coles  &  Lajd  out  to  M"^  Samuell  Cole,  of  Boston,  fower  hundred  acres  of  land  in 

farmes.  '■^^  wilderness,  on  the  westerne   side    of  Merremacke   Riuer,  beginning   at 

Nacooke,  one  part  of  the  same,  about  fiffty  &  fine  acres  Ipng  vpon  the  sajd 
brooke,  and  joyning  to  Merremacke  Riuer,  runing  vp  the  brooke  about  two 
hundred  fiifty  &  two  pole;  also,  one  part  or  parcell  of  the  same,  adjoyning  to 
the  sajd  riu%r,  begining  about  three  quarters  of  a  mile  aboue  it,  and  so  runne 
vp  the  riuer  two  miles  &  thirty  fower  poles,  as  by  the  plott  is  demonstrated , 
also,  three  patches  of  meadow,  lying  distinct  from  the  aforesajd  lands  about 
two  miles,  two  of  them  lying  at  Forrest  Feild  Hill,  the  third  somewhat  dis- 
tant from  them ;  also,  a  smale  parcell  of  meadow  lying  vpon  a  brooke,  (called 
Litle  Nacooke,)  which  brooke  runns  through  the  sajd  ffarme.  The  content  or 
superfitia  of  all  the  aforesajd  parcells  are  fower  hundred  acres  of  land,  all  w* 
land  are  well  &  sufficjently  bounded,  &  marked  w""  C.     May  11,  1659. 

By  JONATHAN  DANFORTH,  Survejor. 

The  Court  approoves  of  this  retourne,  provided  that  this  fower  hundred 
acres  be  made  vp  seven  hundred  acres  backe  from  the  riuer,  out  of  w"""  Cap? 
Edw  Johnson  is  to  haue  his  three  hundred  acres  indifhrently  lajd  out,  respect- 
ing both  meadow  &  vpland ;  M''  Cole  to  haue  the  chojce,  but  Capt  Johnson  to 
bear  half  the  charge  of  laying  of  it  out,  relating  to  what  hath  already  binn 
expended  or  what  further  remajnes. 

Cap*  Pinclions  In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Cap?  John  Pinchon,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete 

to  graunt  him  one  thousand  acres  of  land,  fower  hundred  acres  whereof  in 
reference  to  moneys  disbursed  by  his  ffather,  the  rest  vpon  other  considera- 
tions, provided  that  it  be  not  layd  out  in  more  then  two  places,  and  that  it  be 
not  already  graunted  to  any  other,  nor  hinder  a  plantation. 
[*328.]  *Whereas  M"^  John  Wilson,  Sen,  hath  mett  with  seuerall  disappointments 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  403 

about   laying    out  his  thousand  acres  of   land  graunted  him   by  this  Court      1659. 
aboue  twenty  yearcs  since,  it  is  ordered,  that  jM''  Danforth  be  desired  &  here-    '       '       ' 
by  impowred,  by  himself  or  his  order,  to  lay  out  the  sajd  thousand  acres  in  i.j,Trr-i 
one  or  two  places  where  it  shall  be  found.  1000  acres. 

A  bill  of  chardges  lajd  out  by  Capt  Richard    Dauenport  on  the  new  Cap'Dauen- 
Castle,  the  pticculars  amounting  to  fForty  pounds  eight  shillings  &  eight  penc,  chardges  of 
being  presented  to  &  pervsed  by  this  Court,  the  Court  ordered  the  Tresurer  ^i^  8  S-"  allowed. 
of  the  countrye  to  dischardge  it. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticSn  of  John  Alcocke,  humbly  desiring  the  favor  of  this  Ans'  to  M' 
Court  to  graunt  him  two  hundred  acres  of  land  in  lejw  of  two  hundi-ed  acres  „J^Z^ 
he  grattiffyed  y"  plantation  of  WhipsufFerage  out  of  his  oune,  the  Court  graunts 
his  request,  provided  the  inhabitants  of  Whipsuiferage  haue  y*  sd  two  hun- 
dred acres  in  theire  possession. 

In  ans''  to  a  motion  in  behalfe  of  those  that  haue  attended  of  late  vpon  Edw.  Cowels 
y*  honnored  GoQn"",  referring  to  arreai-es  for  service  donne,  for  ans''  wherevn-  service  a«end- 
to,  although  the  Court  hath  by  an  order  made  already  provided  in  this  case,  '"^  °°  ^'  ^°^' 

n". 

yett  for  seuerall  reasons  inducing,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meet,  relating  to 
the  tjme  past,  to  grattify  Edward  Cowell  w""  the  graunt  of  two  hundred 
acres  of  land  where  he  cann  finde  it,  according  to  lawe,  in  full  sattisfaction 
of  his  demaund,  provided  that  henceforth  they  expect  payment  according 
to  order. 

It   is   ordered,  that  Marshall   Richard  Wajte,  for  his   great  &  dilligent  MarshaU 
paines  to  suiiion  those  that  entertajued  the  Quakers  to  this  Court,  ryding  both  -g^^^,  ^  ""  ™' 
day  &  night,  shall  be  allowed  out  of  the  tresury  of  the  country  the  some  of 
fiue  pounds. 

"Whereas  this  Court  is  informed  y*  Pasaconaways  sonne,  now  in  prison  as  Indians  liberty 
surety  for  y«  payment  of  a  debt  of  forty  fiue  pounds  or  thereabouts,  hauing  land^in'jie'rre- 
nothing  to  pay,  but  affirming  that  sevierall  Indians  now  in  possession  of  a  smale  ^^"^  Riuer. 
island  in  Merremacke  Riuer,  about  sixty  acres,  (the  halfe  whereof  is  broken 
vp,)  are  willing,  after  this  next  yeares  vse  of  theire  sajd  ground,  to  sell  theire 
interest  in  the  sajd  island  to  whomsoeuer  will  giue  most  for  it,  &  so  redeeme 
the  Passaconaway  sonne  out  of  prison,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  sajd  Indians  shall 
haue  liberty  to  sell  y*  sajd  Island,  for  y®  ends  aforesajd,  to  him  y'  will  giue  most 
for  it. 

Whereas  the  Gen  Court,  in  May,  1656,  graunted  some  lands  to  Thomas  Ans'  to 
Lake  &  ptners,  the  sajd  Thomas  Lake  humbly  desiring  that  a  coiiiittee  of  fower  peticon. 
persons  may  be  impowred,  or  any  two  of  them,  to  lay  out  the  land  graunted 
according  to  the  graunt  of  y"  Coiu-t,  it  is  ordered,  that  Lef?  Robert  Pike, 
Lef  ?  Hussie,  M''  Thomas  Bradbury,  &  Robert  Page  be  appointed  a  coiiiittee, 


404  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1659.      or  any  two  of  them  shall  &  hereby  is  impowred  to  lay  out  the  land  herein 
^  mentioned,  making  retourne  thereof  to  this  Court. 

12  November.  •  i  i  •      ^-t  .  /vi 

Hampton  V  pon    a   motion    made    to   this  Court  in  reiferenc    to    the  keeping  of 

Court.  Hampton  Court,  it  is  ordered,  that  Majo"'  Humphrey  Atherton  be  joyned  w"" 

M''  Russell  &  the  rest  of  the  magis*'  appointed  to  keepe  the  sajd  Court  at  the 

time  appointed. 
Hampton  It  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  Hampton  Court,  adjouined  to  y"  second 

iournment        Twesday  after  the  end  of  this  session,  that  the  sajd  Court  be  adjourned  to  the 

twenty  ninth  of  this  Nouember. 
Aus'  to  y«  Car-  In  ans''  to  y"  peticon  ^  Thomas  Cartar,  Joseph  Carter,  &  Samuell  Carter, 

TJ'^'!""™   the  Court  iudgeth  it  meete  to  order  that  the  case  concerned  therein  be  re- 

relation  to  y  *'       " 

orphantsof       ferred  to  the  County  Court  for  Midlesex,  who  are  hereby  impowred  to  act 

W"  Greene. 

in   all   the  pticculars  therein  menconed  for  the  pvission  of  the  orphants,  & 

impowring  ouerseers,  &  taking  in  the   accompts   of  such  as  haue  binn  im- 

ployed  therein,  &  giving  dischardges  to  them  ^  shall  seeme  meete  and  tequall. 

r*329.J  *In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Concord,  it  is  ordered,  that 

Courts  ans'  to    Cap?  Lusher,  Left  Eoger  Clap,  &  Deacon  W™  Parkes  shall  and  hereby  are 

Concord  peti-     _  _ . 

con  ab«  bridges,  inipowred  as  a  comittee  to  heare  &  examine  theire  complaint,  &  what  they 
shall  finde  theire  chardges  expended  in  vpholding  of  such  bridges  as  are  order- 
ly allowed  for  county  bridges  to  be  more  then  theire  due  proportion,  compared 
with  theire  neighbo'^  tonnes,  shall  be  annually  pajd  them  by  the  Tresurer  of 
that  county,  any  former  custome  or  order  of  this  Court  setling  the  same  not- 
withstanding. 
leP  Fisher  to  Ii  ^iis"'  to  the  request  of  Cap?  Eliazer  Lusher,  it  is  ordered,  that  Lef  ? 

^^ P^^tf^T'  Joshua  Fisher  shall  &  hereby  is  impowred  to  lay  out  two  hundred  and  fifty 
er.  acres  of  land  to  him  somewhere  neere  Meadfeild,  or  elswhere,  where  it  may 

be  found  according  to  the  graunt. 
Custome  of  In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Edward  Michelson,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete 

°  ""^t'dV^^    *°  graunt  the  peticoner  the  custome  of  strong  waters  for  his  recompence  of 
Edward  Mich-   service  he  doth  to  the  country,  as  formerly  he  hath  had. 

elson. 

Lef  Ciappssoo  I^  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Left  Roger  Clapp,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete 

acres  ofland.    ^o  graunt  him  fiue  hundred  acres  of  land. 

M'  Winthrops  Amos  Richardson,  Tho  Goold,  &  Jonathan  Danforth  are  by  this  Court 

farme  to  be       impowred  to  lay  out  M'  Winthrops  farme  according  to  the  graunt  of  this  Court, 

2  3  A,  1638. 
M'  Corletts  ^^  ^^  Ordered,  that  Left  Joshua  Fisher  is  &  hereby  shall  be  impowred  to 

farme  to  be       j^„  q^^  ]yj;r  Corletts  farme  of  two  hundred  acres,  scraunted  him  by  this  Court, 

lajd  out.  •'  >  o  J  ' 

in  any  place  not  legally  taken  vp. 

Ans'  to  Enger-  o     t>     ^ 

sails  peticon.  In  ans''  to   the  peticon  of  John   Engersol,   Thomas   Sallowes,  &    Paul 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  405 

Mansfcilcl,  humhly  desiring  the  fauor  of  this  Court  to  graunt  them  the  isLiucl      1  G  5  0. 
called  ftlortons  Misery,  tlie  Court  sees  no  cawse  to  graunt  thcire  request.  ""■     "^       ' 

In  reference  to  the  case  brought  to  this  Court  by  the  Magis'*  non  agreem'  _  " 

°  J  o  o  Courts  judg- 

w""  the  verdict  of  the  jury  at  a  speciall  Court  held  at  Boston  the  ninth  of  mcnt  in  Capt. 

Clark  &  Capt. 

.Sept,  1659,  betweene  Capt  Thomas  Clarke,  plaintiffe,  &   Capt  Jn°  Pearse,  Pearsescase. 
defendant,  for  an  account  of  the  eighth  pte  of  y"  shipp  Exchainge,  the  Court, 
on  a  hearing  of  the  case,  &  the  seuerall  allegations  &  euidences  produced  on 
either  side,  the  Court  found  for  the  defendant  costs  of  Court  twenty  one  shil- 
lings &  sixepenc. 

Whereas  this  Court  graunted  a  former  liberty  to  any  three  associates  of  County  Court 
the  county  of  Yorke,  respecting  theire  remotenes  from  magistrates  &  the  seate  !"    °/  3"   ^ . 
of  authority,  to  keepe  a  County  Court  in  September,  at  Saco,  yearely,  if  they  "**^- 
see  cause,  this  Court,  considering  that  the  greatest  and  most  generall  occasions 
of  Wright  vsually  arising  at  the  hither  part  of  the  sajd  county,  it  is  there- 
fore ordered,  that  any  three  of  the  associates  for  the  county  of  Yorke  are  & 
hereby  shallbe  impowred  to  keepe  one  County  Court  yearely,  either  at  Yorke 
or  Kittery,  in  the  latter  end  of  June,  or  in  July,  as  occasion  doe  require,  pro- 
vided due  notice  be  giuen  of  the  tjme  according  to  former  order. 

"Whereas  John  Stone  &  Andrew  Belchar  were  appointed  to  lay  out  a  farme  M'  Chancjes 
for  M''  Charles  Chauncey,  president  of  Hai-vard  Colledge,  we  haue  gonn  &  "^"^  ^^ 
looked  on  a  plan,  &  there  is  taken  vp  a  tract  of  land  bounded  on  this  manner : 
on  the  east  a  little  swampe  neare  an  Indjan  wigwam,  w*  an  orchard  of 
aple  trees  belonging  to  the  wigwam,  a  plajne  joyning  to  the  swampe,  the 
plaine  runing  to  a  great  pond,  &  from  thence  to  Assebeth  Eiuer ;  and  this  Ijne 
is  circuler  on  the  north  side  ;  the  south  Ijne  runing  circuler  to  the  south  side 
of  a  peece  of  meadow  called  Jacobs  Meadow,  &  so  to  continew  till  it  reach  to 
the  sajd  Assebeth  Riuer.      18  8  111,  1659. 

ANDEEW  BELCHAR. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approoves  of  this  retourne,  so  as  what  is  lajd  oiit 
exceed  not  fiue  hundred  acres. 

*In  ans"^  to  the  request  of  Elizabeth  Majnard  &  James  Johnson,  adminis-      [*330.] 
trators  to  the  estate  of  John  Mainard,  deceased,  humbly  desiring  liberty  &  Ans'  to  Eiiza- 

1       .  nil  o  1  c  111  '"^'^  Mainerda 

authority  to  sell  the  house  &  garden  of  y"  deceased,  that  thereby  they  may  be  peticon. 
enabled  to  dischardge  the  debts,  itt  is  ordered,  that  the  case  be  referred  to 
the  hearing  &  determination  of  the  County  Court  of  that  sheire,  w""  whom 
y'  inventory  &  accompts  of  debt  &  credit  of  y'  estate  are  vpon  record. 


406  THE  KECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1659.  In    ans''  to    the    peticon   of    ]SP    Samuell  "Whiting,    in    behalfe    of   his 

"■      '^       ^    brother  M''  John  Whiting,   &  M'  Richard  Westland,  aldermen  of  Boston, 

for  this   Courts    graunt   of    fower    hundred    acres    of   land  a  peece,  in  con- 
Ans'  to  M'  °  '■  ' 

Whitings  peti-  sideration  of  fiffty  pounds   a  peece   long   since   lajd   out  in   the  coiiion  ad- 
con,  800  acres  ^       /-^  i  •  *  i^  t 

to  Jn°  Whiting  Venture,  the  Court   graunts  ms  request,  i.  e.,  fower  hundred  acres  a  peece 
itn^"^''^  ^''^*"  to  them,  the  sajd  John  Whiting  &  Richard  Westland,  &  theire  heires  &  as- 

signes,  &  that  it  be  lajd  out  adjoyning  to  such  lands  as  are  taken  vp  by  order 

of  this  Court. 
An  island  of  In  ans''  to  the  motion  of  M"'   Samuell   Symonds,  the  Court  judgeth  it 

d  t'"^M?^s"-" '  'neete  to  graunt  him  any  island  in  Casco  Bay  not  exceeding  fine  hundred 
monds.  acres,  being  w""in  our  lymitts  &  not  formerly  graunted,  as  a  recompenc  for 

his  great  paines,  losse  of  time  in  y'  cheife  of  suiiier,  &  his  good  service  in 

taking  in  the  easterne  parts  the  last  yeere. 
Charts  Toune  In  the  case  betweene  Charls  Toune  &  Thomas  Gold,  itt  is  ordered,  that 

M''  Danforth,  Ephrajm  Child,  &  Capt  Johnson  be  impowred  as  a  coiiiittee  to 

vejw  the  bounds  betweene  them,  the  land  &  fence  in  controuersy,  &  to  make 

retourne  of  what  they  find  to  the  next  Court  of  Eleccon. 
Courts  recora-  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  John  Marshall  shall  haue  twenty  shillings  pajd  him 

M°'^h  11  "  °   ^y  ^^'^  country  Tresurer   for   clensing   the  Court  house,  drawing  of  wood, 

making  of  fire,  &S,  for  y'  last  yeai'e. 
Freemen  re-  Whereas  some  yeares  since  seuerall  gent  &  others,  which  were  freemen 

moovcd  from     ^|-  ^j^^j^  iurisdiccSn,  remooved  themselves  from  vs  into  the  iurisdiccbn  of  Conec- 

Conccticott  re-  "^  ** 

main  freemen,   ticott,  w"^''  are  lately  returned,  concerning  whom  this  Courte  thinkes  meete  to 
unubsioneis     (-[g^j^.^.g  tljem  still  to  be  freemen,  w^'out  taking  any  further  oath,  &  for  such  as 

power  to  glue  ^  o        j  ' 

freemans  oath   ^yg  ^qi^  freemen  in  any  of  those  plantations  vpon  Conecticott  Riuer,  it  is  or- 

at  Springfeild. 

dered,  that  the  coiiiissioners  of  Sj)ringfeild  shall  haue  power  to  administer  the 

freemans  oath  to  any  that  are  capable  by  lawe  to  take  it,  as  also  that  the  new 

toune  vpon  the  sajd  riuer  be  vnder  the  power  of  Springfeild  coiuissioners,  iu 

reference  to  County  Courts,  till  this  Court  take  further  order. 

200  ac's  to  In  ails'"  to  the  petition  of  Richard  CoUecott,  the  Court,  knowing  the  read- 

0  ecott.    j^^gg  ^£  j.j^g  petitioner  at  all  tjmes  to  be  servicable  to  the  countrje,  doe  graunt 

him  two  hundred  acres  of  land  adjoyning  to  such  as  be  lajd  out  by  order  of 

this  Court. 

Major  Ather-  IM'"  Humphrey  Atharton   &  ISI"^  Richard    Russell   is   appointed  by  this 

Bell  fo  ktV^"**"  Court  to  joyne  w"'  Cap?  Wiggins  in  keeping  the  County  Court  at  Hampton 

Hamptcin  on  adjournment,  y'^  2*  Twesday  after  the  end  of  this  present  sessions  of  the 

Court. 

Generall  Court. 

The  Court,  hauing  considered  of  the  seuerall  offences  of  those  persons  y' 
entertayned  the  Quaker^,  w"'  the  answers  giuen  in  by  them  respectiuely,  doe 


12  November. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  407 

order,  that  James  Rawlings,  being  more  innocent  &  ingenious  then  the  rest,      1  6 .5  9. 
be  only  admonished  by  the  honnored  Goueno',  w'^''  was  donne. 

2.  That  Anthony  Emery  pay  as  a,  fine  to  y"  country  tenn  pounds  and 
tenn  shillings  for  making  a  lye  in  y"  face  of  the  Court,  &  be  disfranchised. 

3.  That  Thomas  Spencer  pay  as  a  fine  to  y'  country  for  his  entertayning 
the  Quakers  the  soiue  of  fiue  pounds,  &  be  disfranchised. 

*4.    That  Richard  Nason,  for  the  like  offence,  pay  fiue  pounds  also,  &      [*3.31.] 
be  disfranchised.  Coiirts  censure 

of  y  y^  enter- 

5.  That  Richard  Swayne,  for  his  entertayning  the  Quakers,  shall  pay  as  tajned  y  Qua- 
a  fine  the  soiiie  of  three  pounds,  &  be  disfranchised.  '^^^' 

6.  That  Zackeus  Gold  pay  as  a  fine  for  his  entertajning  the  Quakers  the 
some  of  three  pounds. 

7.  That  Thomas  Macy  pay  as  a  fine  the  some  of  thirty  shillings,  and  be 
admonished  by  the  Gouerno"'. 

That  Edward  Wharton,  who  accompanied  the  Quakers,  &  pilatted  them  Edward  Whar 
from  one  place  to  another,  for  his  bold  attempts,  shall  haue  corporall  punish- 
ment, i.  e.,  whipt  w""  twenty  stripes,  &  coiuitted  to  prison,  there  to  remajne 
till  he  bring  suertjes  for  his  good  behaviour. 

And  that  attachment  issue  out  ag'  John  Heard  for  his  contempt,  &  y'  he 
appearc  before  y*  next  Generall  Court,  &  y*  Nicho  Hogsden  be  sent  for  to 
appeare  at  the  same  time. 

In  ans"'  to  the  petition  of  John  Smith,  of  Charls  Toune,  humbly  desiring  Courts  ans'  to 
this  Courts  confirmation  of  laud  that  Jetlrro,  y'=  Indian,  tender  to  sell  to  him  jj^j, 
to  sattisfy  a  debt  he  owes  him,  the  Court  judgeth  it  not  meete  to  graunt  his 
request. 

In   ans'   to    the    peticon  of    Capt    W™   Torrey,    this   Court  judgeth  it  Ans'toCap> 
meete  to  confirme  Slatt  Island  to  him,  on  y*  condicons  in  this  Courts  graunt  ^q^_ 
thereof,  October,  sixteene  hundred  &  fiffty,  he  having  now  pfected  the  the 
Depu'^  booke  of  coppies  of  records. 

Henry  Chickering  is  hereby  impowred  to  solemnize  marriage  betweene  Hen.  Chicker- 
two  or  three  couples,  legally  published,  at  Dedham,  Capt  Lusher  being  now  to°^arrv* 
attending  y*  Court.     June  20,  1659. 

The  determination  of  vs  whose  names  are  subscribed,  impowred  by  order 

of  the  Generall  Court  to  the  setling  of  the  chardges  in  refference  to  a  difference 

betwixt  Capt    Edward   Johnson,  Ensigne   John  Carter,  &  Thomas   Dutton, 

which  three  petitioned  the  Court  for  a  determination.  Comittees  re- 

Impri.    Wee  say,  that  Thomas  Dutton  shall  pay  to  Ensigne  Carter  the  toume  in  Car- 
ters case  & 
charges  of  Charles  Toune  Court,  the  soiue  of  three  pounds  two  shillings  &  Cap' Johnson. 

fower  pence.  ^ 


408 


THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 


1659. 


12  November. 


2'''.  The  chardges,  at  Wooboiirne,  of  the  coraittee,  w""  wittnesses,  the 
some  of  sixe  pounds,  the  w'^''  sajd  some  of  sixe  pounds  is  to  be  sequally 
devided  betwixt  the  three  petitioners,  that  is,  forty  shillings  each  petitioner. 

Lastly.  "Wee  agree,  that,  whereas  Thomas  Dutton  hath  clamorously 
abused  Ensigne  John  Carter,  calling  him  theefe  &  Ijar,  and  in  saying  the 
sajd  Carter  hath  stolne  the  childrens  land,  he,  the  sajd  Dutton,  the  next  Lords 
day,  in  a  full  meeting,  doe  then  and  there  acknowledge  that  he  hath  wrong- 
fully abused  the  sajd  Carter,  which  he  refusing,  wee  judge  meete,  that  he  pay 
vnto  the  sajd  Carter  the  some  of  tenn  pounds  starling,  at  or  before  the  twen- 
tieth of  the  next  December  after  the  date  hereof.  The  Court,  on  perusall  of 
this  retom-ne,  signed  by  Ephrajm  Child  &  Edward  Cakes,  doe  allowe  &  ap- 
proove  thereof. 


Courts  judg- 
ment in  Whit- 
t.icres  &  God- 
frys  case. 


Oldaras  .500 
ac"  confirmed 
to  JI'  Dunier 
by  Water 
Tonne  & 
Court. 


In  the  case  depending  betweene  Abraham  Whittacre,  plaintiffe,  &  John 
Godfrey,  defendant,  the  Court,  on  a  full  hearing  of  the  case  &  the  evidences 
produced,  doe  find  for  the  plaintiffe  tenn  bushells  of  wheate  &  costs  of  Court, 
i.  e.,  thirteene  pounds  fower  shillings  &  seven  pence. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Water  Toune  for  this  Court 
hearing  &  determination  of  a  case  betwene  them  &  M"^  Richard  Dunier,  re- 
lating to  M'  Oldams  graunt  of  fiue  hundi-ed  acres  of  land  vf^Hn  theire  Ijmitts, 
the  Court  having  ordered  a  hearing  of  this  case,  Ephrajm  Child,  deputy  for 
Water  Toune,  in  the  name  of  the  toune,  decljng  a  hearing,  presented  a  vote 
of  y*^  toune  of  Water  Tonne,  dat  24"^  October,  1659.  Voted  at  a  publike 
toune  meeting,  that  the  fiue  hundred  acres  of  land  once  the  land  of  M'  Oldam, 
but  now  lajd  to  M'  Duiner,  in  the  bounds  of  Watertoune,  doe  remajne  his, 
the  sajd  M''  Dumers,  w"'out  any  of  the  tounes  opposition.  Wittnessed  by  me 
in  y*  name  of  the  toune. 

EPHRAJM   CHILD. 


The  Court  accepts  of  this  returne  of  the  toune  of  Water  Toune  as  that 
w*  putts  an  end  to  y"  controuersy  mentioned  in  this  petition,  and  confirmes 
the  land  accordingly  to  M''  Richai-d  Duiner. 


r*332  1  *Wee,  whose   names  are   subscribed,  being    appointed  by  the  Generall 

Court  to  lay  out  the  bounds  of  the  Indian  plantation  called  Naticke,  having 
considered  the  lands  neere  adjoynlng  to  the  sajd  place,  doe  finde  that  diuers 
former  graunts  of  toune  boundes  &  farmes  doe  greatly  obstruct  the  convenient 
accoiiiodatlon  of  the  sajd  plantation  w""  suitable  lands,  doe  hereby  order  & 
determine,  (not  medling  w"*  what  is   still   controuersall  betwixt  Dedham  & 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  409 

Naticke,)  that  the  bounds  of  the  sajd  plantation   shall  extend  by  the   liuer      1659. 
from  Naticke  present  meeting  house  as  farre  as  the  house  of  Nicholas  Woods,  '' 

12  Novembci 

&  from  his  house  to  be  continewed  vpon  a  westerly  Ijne  fower  miles,  and  Naticke 
westerly  the  bounds  thereof  to  extend  as  farre  as  Chochittuate  Brooke  at  the  bounds. 
coiiion  passing  place  or  high  way  that  leadeth  from  Sudbury  to  Jn"  Stones 
house,  and  from  thence  the  bounds  ^  to  be  John  Stones  land  &  Sudbury  Riuer, 
extending  vp  Sudbuiy  Riuer  fower  miles,  to  be  measured  by  a  streight  Ijne 
from  the  aforesajd  coiiion  wadeing  place  on  Chochittuate  Brooke,  and  from 
the  sajd  termination  of  fower  miles  to  be  bounded  by  a  streight  Ijne  extending 
to  the  aforesajd  termination  of  fower  miles  that  leadeth  from  the  aforesajd 
house  of  Nicholas  Wood ;  and  all  the  land  lying  w'l'in  the  sajd  compasse  ad- 
joyning  to  the  bounds  of  Sudbury,  Dedham,  &  Water  Touiie,  not  formerly 
graunted  by  the  Generall  Court  to  any  toune  or  particcular  persons,  to  be  & 
remajne  to  the  vse  &  only  behooffe  of  the  sajd  plantation,  provided  alwayes 
none  of  the  Indians  or  theire  successors  shall  haue  power  to  sell,  aljenate, 
giue,  or  dispose  of  any  the  sajd  lands  from  the  sajd  plantation,  nor  shall  20  October, 
any  of  the  sajd  lands  be  Ijable  to  any  judgment  or  execution  in  any  ciuil 
action,  w*''out  the  consent  of  the  Generall  Court  first  had  &  obtejned,  but  all 
such  act  or  acts  to  be  accounted  illegall  &  voyd  in  lawe,  whether  to  Indians, 
English,  or  any  other  nation  or  people  whatsoeuer  ;  provided  that  this  shall  not 
prohibitt  the  sale  or  aljenation  of  any  the  sajd  lands  from  one  Indian  to  to 
another,  hauing  the  approbation  of  such  of  the  honnored  magistrates  as  shall 
from  tjme  to  tjme  be  ordered  to  attend  y''  sajd  plantation  in  matters  of 
judicatuie. 

SYMON  WILLARD, 

HUMPHREY  ATHARTON, 

THO:  DANFORTH, 

ROGER  CLAPP, 

ISACKE  HEATH, 

WILLJAM  PARKES. 

The  Court,  before  they  consented  to  this  retourne,  ordered,  y'  y'  toune 
of  Dedham  should  haue  notice  giuen  them,  y'  they  haue  liberty  to  send  some 
persons  to  plead  theire  tounes  interest,  or  w'  else  they  haue  to  say  in  y*  case 
before  the  Court  the  next  fowerth  day,  &  that  M"^  Elliott  also  haue  notice   28 : 8  mo.,  69. 
giuen  him  to  be  present  at  the  time  appointed, 

Vpon  hearing  of  both  partjes,  itt  is  agreed  &  consented  to  by  all  ptjes, 
that  whereas  mention  is  made  of  Naticke  meeting  house  for  a  point  to  guide 
the  Ijnes  that  standeth  w"'in  Dedham  lands  &  bounds,  it  is  to  be  understood 

VOL.    IV. P.VRT    I.  52 


410 
1G59. 

' r ' 

12  November. 


THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

that  the  graunt  to  the  Indian  plantation  is  only  of  such  lands  that  are  free 
from  former  graunts,  &  haue  not  binn  taken  vp  by  others,  by  order  of  this 
Court,  and  that  this  guift  of  the  Court  beginns  where  the  sajd  Ijnes  doe  meete 
w'''  Dedham  Ijnes,  and  no  lands  formerly  graunted  to  Dedhani  is  included 
therein ;  and  so  the  Court  allowed  of  the  retoiu-ne  aboue  signed  w"'  this 
condition  added  thereto. 


Rent  of  bevare 
trade  to  pur- 
chase pouder. 
Aditiou  to  y 
country  rate 
4p<. 


[*333.] 

1000  acres  of 
land  g'ed  to 
Anna  Cole  & 
Anna  Keayne. 


Comissioners 
of  Boston 
sworne. 


Ans'  to  Cap' 
Clarks  peti. 


Courts  order  as 
to  Major  Gen" 
Dennisons 
land. 


Courts  sen- 
tance  of  seUU 
Quakers. 


Voted  by  the  whole  Court,  that  the  rent  for  the  bevar  trade  this  yeai-e  be 
lajd  out  by  the  Tresurer  for  pouder  for  the  countrj-s  store  forthwith. 

It  was  voted  also  by  the  whole  Court,  that  the  Tresurer  chardge  on  the 
seuerall  counstables  one  quarter  part  of  the  annuall  rate  more  then  their 
proportions  already  chardged. 

*Iu  consideration  of  the  late  Capt  Robert  Keaynes  libberall  guifts  to  the 
country  in  his  will,  the  whole  Court  mett  together  voted,  that  M'^  Anna  Cole, 
the  late  relict  of  the  sajd  Capt  Robert  Keajne,  and  Anna  Keayne,  the  grand 
child,  shall  haue  fiue  hundred  acres  of  land  a  peece  lajd  out  to  them  &  theire 
heires  where  it  is  to  be  found. 

Ca])t  Tho  Sauage,  M'  Edw  Tyng,  M''  Anthony  Stoddard,  M'  Jerremjah 
Houchin,  &  Edward  Rawson  being  presented  by  the  counstables  of  Boston  as 
chosen  by  y^  sd  toune  comissioners  for  this  yeare,  had  theire  oathes  giuen  them 
by  the  Gouernor  in  open  Court,  Cap?  Tho  Clai-ke  &  M'  Rich  Parker  not 
present. 

It  was  voted  by  the  whole  Coiurt  mett  together,  that  Capt  Thomas  Clarke 
shall  haue  liberty  to  come  in  as  a  creditor  to  M""  Sellecks  estate,  &  haue  his 
proportion  therein  according  to  what  he  makes  good  prooffe  to  be  due  to  him. 

The  Majo''  Generall  Daniell  Dennison  declaring  that  his  farme,  nere  the 
Dep'ys,  was  not  lajd  out,  by  reason  of  his  being  on  y*  countrys  service,  at  his 
request  the  Court  mett  together  voted,  that  the  land  mentioned  in  his  petition 
be  no  ways  taken  vp  by  any  on  Merremake  Riuer  till  the  next  Court  of 
Election. 

Daniell  Gold,  Robert  Harper,  Alice  Couland,  Mary  Scott,  Hope  Clifton, 
W™  King,  Margaret  Smith,  Mary  Traske,  Provided  Southwicke,  &  Hannah 
Phelps  being  all  of  them  apprehended  &  coiiiitted  to  prison  for  adherence  to 
the  cursed  sect  of  the  Quakers,  hauing  beene  called  before  this  Coui't,  openly 
shewing  theire  contempt  by  refusing  to  giue  any  ciuil  respect,  &  vpon  the 
quaestion  put  to  them  not  disouning  the  same,  nor  theire  submission  to  the 
order  here  established,  either  in  church  or  coinonwealth,  all  w'^'^  being  consid- 
ered, w"'  theire  disorderly  practises  &  vagabond  like  life  in  absenting  them- 
selves from  theire  family  relations  and  runing  from  place  to  place  w^'out  any 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  411 

just  reason    by  them  rendered,   the  Court  doth  order,   that  Alice  Couland,      1  G  5  9. 

Hannah  Phelps,  ISIary  Scott,  &  Hope  Clifton  be  admonished  ;  that  Daniell    '       '^       ' 

Gold  be  whipt  w"'  thirty  strij^es,  Robert  Harper  w">  fiffteene,  W"'  King  w* 

fifFteene,  Margaret  Smith  w"»  tenn,  Mary  Traske  w""  tenn,  &  Provided  South- 

■\vicke  w""  tenn  ;  that  Daniell  Gold,  Robt  Harper,  AUce  Couland,  Mary  Scott, 

&  Hope  Clifton  shall  depart  this  jurisdiction  ■\v"'in  fiue  dayes,  w"^  if  they  faile 

in,  shallbe  coiiiitted  to  prison,  to  be  proceeded  w"^  according  to  the  lawe ;  the 

rest  to  be  coiiiitted  to  prison,  to  be  proceeded  w*  as  the  law  dii-ects.     This 

was  voted  by  the  whole  Court,  to  be  declared  by  the  Gouerno"",  Dep*y  Gou:, 

&  Magis'^  &  Deputyes  in  toune  on  the  morrow,  at  nine  in  the  mornng,  w"^** 

was  donne  accordingly  &  executed. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  W"  Arnold,  the  Court,  hauing  by  a  coinittee  Ans'  to  Ar- 
examined  it,  doe  finde  that  the  petitioner  being  authorized  by  this  Court  to  act  "°  " '"' "'°°' 
in  behalfe  of  the  countrje,  his  complaints  referred  to  these  two  heads  :  1.  That 
on  a  ballauc  of  account  there  resteth  due  to  him  seven  pounds  fiue  shillings 
eight  penc. 

2.  That  such  goods  as  he  receavcd  in  pt  of  sattisfaction  for  what  he  expend- 
ed by  virtue  of  the  sajd  coinission  haue  beene  taken  from  him  by  the  inhab- 
itants of  that  place  where  he  liueth,  w"'  great  damages  accrewing  to  him  therebv ; 
and  doe  order  in  ans'  to  the  1''  complaint,  that  his  account  presented  be 
pervsed  by  M'  Collecott,  who  was  in  coinission  also  for  that  designe ;  and  that 
in  case  it  doth  not  appcare  the  sajd  debt  hath  binn  fully  payd,  that  the  bal- 
lanc  of  the  sajd  account,  when  pervsed  &  rectified,  if  any  error  appeare,  be 
forthwith  sattisfied  out  of  the  coimtry  tresury.  To  his  second  complaint,  the 
Court,  finding  that  the  sajd  Arnold  hath  since  his  comission  voluntarily  left 
the  protection  of  this  Court,  &  joyned  himself  w">  the  people  of  whom  he 
complajnes  to  be  thus  wronged,  but  being  honestly  paid  by  those  that  coiiiis- 
sionated  him,  doe  judge  it  not  ffiquall  that  this  Court  should  make  him  sattis- 
faction for  the  wrong  that  his  oune  people  hath  donne  him  ;  but  in  case  the 
matter  be  reall,  and  the  petitioner  doth  aphend  his  cawse  to  be  just,  he  may 
haue  liberty,  by  himself  or  his  attourney,  legally  to  seize  the  persons  or  estates 
of  such  as  haue  binn  acto''s  therein,  finding  them  in  this  colony,  &  bring  the 
case  to  trjall  in  any  Court  of  judicature. 

*In  obedience  to  the  act  or  grant  of  the  honnored  Generall   Court  of  the      [*33-l:.] 
Massachusctt  in  New  England,  lajd  out  &  exactly  measured.  Major  Symon  M^JorWiUards 

farme  of  500 

Willards  farme,  conteyning  fiue  hundred  acres,  scittuate,  lying,  and  being,  for  acres  by  Groa- 
the  most  part,  on  the  east  side  of  Groaten  Riuer,  betwixt  the  plantation  graunt- 
ed  to  the  inhabitants  of  Lancaster,  and  the  now  inhabitants  of  Groten,  at  tlie 


412  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

1659.  place  -W^^  is  called  by  the  Indians  Nanajcoyijcus,  begining  at  the  great  riuer 
^  ■''  '  side,  about  one  hundred  rodds  to  the  nortward  of  Nanajcoyijcus  Brooke  ;  be- 
gining, wee  say,  at  the  riuers  side,  runing  a  due  east  Ijne  ninety  fewer  rodds, 
there  making  an  angle  varying  forty  fine  degrees  to  the  southward  ;  then 
runing  one  mile  and  a  halfe  and  forty  rods  vpon  a  south  east  point,  there 
making  an  angle  varying  twenty  degrees  from  the  old  Ijne  ;  runing  on  that 
point  sixty  rodds,  there  making  an  acute  angle  of  sixty  degrees  ;  runing  on  a 
west  &  by  south  point  halfe  a  mile,  there  making  an  angle  varying  t'i\o  & 
twenty  degrees  to  the  northward  ;  runing  on  a  west  &  by  north  point  one 
mile,  there  making  an  angle  vaiying  thirty  three  degrees  from  the  old  Ijnc  ; 
runing  on  a  north  west  point  to  the  riuer,  it  being  seven  score  rods,  and  from 
thence  vpon  a  streight  line  to  the  place  where  wee  begann,  w'^''  last  Ijne  doth 
crosse  Groten  Riuer  twice. 

This  by  me,  THOMAS   NOJES. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approoves  of  this  returne,  provided  the  thirtje  acres 
lajd  out  ouer  the  north  east  side  of  the  riuer  be  left  out  &  taken  on  some  other 
part  of  the  Ijnes,  &  that  there  be  not  aboue  one  hundred  acres  of  meadow  lajd 
out  in  this  farme. 

Att  a  County  Coui-t  held  at  Cambridge,  October  4"*,  1659. 

Whereas  the  last  Generall  Court  held  at  Boston  ordered,  that  this  Court 
should  examine  the  controuersy  depending  betweene  the  execcuto"  of  the  last 
will  &  testament  of  M"^  Edward  Goffe,  deceased,  and  his  sonne,  Samuell 
Goffe,  both  partjes  hauing  had  tjmely  notice  &  liberty  to  present  theire  re- 
spective pleas  &  evidenc  in  y*  case,  — 

The  retourne  of  this  Court  vnto  the  honnored  Gennerall  Court  is  as 
foUoweth  :  viz.,  wee  find,  — 

Sam.  GofFs  1.    That  the  pleas  of  the  sajd   Samuell,  for  the  substanc  thereof,  may  be 

comprised  vnder  these  following  heads  :  — 

1.  That  the  houses  &  lands  of  the  sajd  Edward  Goffe  (at  least  in  reuer- 
sion  after  the  widdowes  death)  doe  belong  vnto  the  sajd  Samuell  by  virtue  of 
a  promise  made  by  the  sajd  Edward  for  obteining  the  marriage  of  the  sajd 
Samuell  w"'  Hannah  Bernard,  for  evidenc  whereof  he  presenteth  the  testi- 
mony of  M"'  Broune,  Ensign  Shearman,  &  y"  young  womans  mother,  w"" 
arguments  of  the  ajquity  thereof,  from  his  long  service  to  his  ffiither,  for 
the  gayning  &  vpholding  his  fathers  estate  w"'out  considerable  recompence. 

2.  That  his  ffather,  on  the  consumation  of  the  marriage  treaty,  engaged 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  4I3 

to  glue  him  for  his  present  supply  two  hundred  &  tenn  pounds,  and  at  his      16  59. 
death  a  double  portion.  ^'       r       •' 

3.    That  he  is  greatly  wronged  by  the  execcutors,  —  °^'^"  ^'' 

(1.)  By  exliibbiting  to  this  Court  a  doubtfull  writing  as  the  last  will  of 
Iiis  ffather ; 

(2.)  By  not  exliibbiting  a  true  inventory  of  the  sajd  estate,  according 
to  law ; 

(3.)    By  w'holding  from  him  his  due  right  [1.  lu  quantity. 
according  to  his  fathers  -will,  —  L  2.  In  quallity. 

2.  That  in  ans''  to  the  sajd  pleas  the  execcutors  doe  present  to  con- 
sideration, — 

1.  That  the  evidence  of  the  sajd  promise  are  the  neere  relations  of  the 
sajd  Samuell  by  marriage  with  his  wife. 

2.  That  if  any  words  of  such  tendency  did  at  any  time  in  discourse  hap- 
pent  to  fall  from  the  lips  of  the  sajd  Edward  Goffe,  yett  neuerthelesse  they 
could  not  be  obliging,  but  at  most  in  propposition  only. 

For  euidences  whereof  the  execcutors  doe  |)>sent,  — 

(1.)    That  y°  sajd  Samuell  &  wittnesses  doe  all  confesse  y'  y*  marriage  Execcutore 
treaty  was  not  at  this  time  conSmated.  ""^'^ 

(2.)  That  no  mention  was  made  of  any  such  thing  at  y"  consumation  of 
y*  marriage  treaty  by  evidence  presented  on  oath. 

(3.)  The  sajd  M"'  Goffes  great  trouble  when  such  a  report  was  whispred 
in  his  life,  his  earnest  pursuite  of  the  author  thereof,  &  vtter  denjall  of  any 
such  act  to  haue  binn  donne  by  him,  attested  on  oath  by  diners  wittnesses. 

3.  The  illegallity  of  such  expressions  as  to  y°  convejanc  of  an  inhaerit- 
ance  thereby,  being, — 

1.  Repugnant  to  his  fathers  will  &  testament ; 

2.  Invalid  by  y*  lawes  of  y*  country  selling  inheritances. 

4.  The  vnreasonablenes  of  this  clajme  of  Samuell  Goffe,  thereby  wholly  To  his  ist  plea, 
disinheriting  his  4  sisters,  who,  by  the  law  of  God  &  of  this  coiiion  wealth,  & 

by  the  will  of  theire  ffather,  are  joinct  heires  w"'  himself,  especially  consider- 
ing that  Samuell  Goffe  maketh  his  clajme  not  only  to  the  house  «&  land  vallued 
at  six  hundred  and  nineteene  pounds,  but  also  to  two  hundred  and  tenn 
pounds  by  couenant  and  promise  of  the  sajd  Edward  on  the  consuiiiation  of 
the  marriage  treaty,  &  also,  besides  all  this,  for  a  double  portion,  whereas  the 
whole  estate  of  houses,  lands,  &  chattells,  reall  and  personall,  doth  not  much 
exceed  twelve  hundred  pounds. 

*To  j-«  argument  of  Samuell  Goffes  deserts,  they  graunt  it  so  farr  for  a      P335.] 
truth ;  i.  e.,  y'  for  the  gennerall  he  Ae  liued  in  his  ffathers  house  till  his  man-iage, 


414  THE  KECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OP 

1659.  be  it  twenty  eight  yeeres  of  age,  more  or  lesse,  but  not  as  a  servant,  as  he 
"  '  ^  affirmeth,  but  as  a  freeman,  at  least  for  fow  er  yeeres  &  a  halfe  of  the  latter  pte 
of  the  sajd  time,  he  allowing  his  ffather  for  his  board,  &  from  his  ffather  he 
receiving  full  recompence  for  all  he  wrought,  whither  by  the  day  or  the  great, 
for  euidence  whereof  they  present  the  sajd  Edwards  booke  of  accounts, 
wherein  the  particculars  on  each  side  are  clearly  &  fully  demonstrated. 

To  his  2'^  plea  they  graunt  a  promise  of  two  hundred  &  tenn  pounds, 
made  by  the  sajd  Edward,  on  the  consuiiiation  of  the  marriage  treaty,  to  be 
pajd  on  condicbn  then  l^mised,  as  also  that  the  sajd  Edward  did  then  declare 
himself  fully  to  intend  the  making  vp  of  the  same  a  double  portion  at  his 
death,  but  w"^all  they  doe  present  on  oath  his  then  denjall  to  be  ingaged 
thereto. 

To  his  3**  plea,  that  he  is  greatly  wronged  by  the  execcutors,  1.  For  that, 
referring  to  y*  legallity  of  the  will,  the  execcutors  doe  present  cleare  &  full 
testimony,  on  oath,  that  the  will  exhibbited  on  record  in  this  Court  by  the  in- 
terljnings,  different  votes,  8c  hands,  what  they  be,  yet  neuerthelesse  the  sajd 
Edward  declared  the  same  to  be  his  last  will  &  testament,  such  as  he  would 
alter  no  parte  thereof,  &  expressly  mentioning  the  enterljnings  therein  to  be 
his  oune  act. 

2.    For  the  inventory,  if  any  error  be  therein,  they  are  willing  to  be 
convinced  thereof,  not  being  conscious  to  themselves  of  any  fraud  or  deceite 
by  them  wittingly  donne  or  intended. 
Courts  judgm'  3.    For  w"'holding  his  due  right  according  to  his  fathers  will,  referring 

■^  ^'  as  well  to  quallity  as  quantity,  the  execcutors  haue  jiresented  in  a  schedule 
hereto  annexed  the  soiiie  of  the  whole  inventory,  w""  theire  distribution 
thereof  to  the  seuerall  interests,  &  tender  accordingly  to  the  complajnant,  as 
also  theire  humble  motion  to  the  honnored  Court  for  the  selling  of  the  sajd 
estate. 

Now  the  premisses,  w'*"  what  hath  binn  psentcd  by  either  side  as  evi- 
dence of  theire  rcspectiue  pleas,  having  binn  by  this  Court  ducly  considered, 
the  result  whereof  is  as  ffolloweth  :  — 

1.  That  the  will  exhibbited  by  the  execcutors  to  this  Court  on  record  is, 
by  sufficjent  evidence,  legally  prooved  to  be  the  last  will  &  testament  of  the 
sajd  Edward  Goffe,  deceased,  &  may  not,  by  any  coulorable  pretence  whatso- 
euer,  be  violated. 

2.  That  the  clajmes  of  Samuell  Goffe,  so  farre  as  they  be  repugnant  to 
the  true  meaning  of  the  testator  declared  in  the  sajd  will,  are  illegall,  &  not 
by  authority  to  be  graunted. 

3.  That  the  ground  of  Samuell  Goffes  1  plea  are  illegall,  &  absolutely 


12  November 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  415 

repugnant  to  the  true  meaning  of  his  fathers  will,  and  that  he  may  not,  ■w"'out      165  9. 
great  injustice  to  the  widdow  and  liis  fewer  sisters,  be  countenanced  therein. 

4.  That  the  execcutors,  according  to  theire  best  light,  haue  conscionably 
&  carefully  attended  theire  ofBce  of  loue  to  the  deceased  &  his  relations  sui-- 
viving,  &  haue  not  binn  wanting  in  tendring  to  the  sajd  Samuel  Goffe  his  due 
proportion  according  to  the  sajd  will,  altho,  by  reason  of  theire  refusall  to 
graunt  his  aboue  sajd  clajme,  he  hath  not  seene  meete  to  accept  thereof. 

5.  That  the  q^uantity  tendred  was  a  full  tender  of  what  at  the  present  did 
appeare,  &  that  it  was  not  in  full  of  what  might  afterwards  appeare  ;  &  for 
quallity  wee  see  no  just  cause  of  complaints,  he  hauing  his  full  share  of  all  the 
land  &  household  goods  :  he  might  haue  had  more  had  he  desired  them.  The 
house  not  being  convenient  to  be  parted  betweene  his  mother  and  he,  especial- 
ly considering  how  great  a  temptation  it  would  in  all  likelyhood  be  to  them 
both,  either  of  sinning  or  suffering,  &  to  leaue  the  widdow  desolate  of  an  hab- 
itation, the  execcutors  haue  not  thought  it  warrantable  to  make  it  theire  act, 
neither  doth  this  Court  see  cause  to  disallow  what  they  haue  donne  therein. 

RI:    BELLINGHAM,  Dep'  Gou:, 
SYMON   WILLARD, 
THOMAS   DANFORTH. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approoves  of  the  retourne  of  the  County  Court 
referring  to  this  case. 

On  a  second  hearing  of  the  County  Courts  returne  relating  to  the  differ- 
enc  betweene  Sarauell  Goffe,  sonne  to  the  late  Edward  Goffe,  and  the 
execcuto''s  of  the  last  will  &  testament  of  the  sajd  Edward  Goffe,  the  Court, 
hauing  fully  heard  what  was  alleadged  by  both  partjes,  doe  judge  that  the 
houses  &  lands  of  Edward  Goffe,  the  ffather,  deceased,  lying  in  Cambridge, 
doth  not  of  right  belong  to  Samuell  Goffe.  after  the  decease  of  his  mother, 
any  further  then  according  to  the  will  of  the  sajd  Edward  Goffe,  the  ffather, 
and  that  the  hundred  fiffty  seven  pounds  thiiteene  shillings  &  eight  pence 
chardged  by  the  execcuto's  vpon  Samuell  Goffe,  in  the  divission  of  the  estate, 
be  accounted  but  as  one  hundred  pounds,  according  to  his  ffathers  will ;  and 
doe  order,  that  Cap?  Edward  Johnson,  Cap?  Eliazer  Lusher,  &  Ensigne 
Hopestill  Foster  shall  &  hereby  are  appointed  a  coinittee  to  see  that  the  estate 
of  the  sajd  Edward  Goffe  be  disposed  of  according  to  his  will  &  the  declara- 
tion of  this  Court  in  refference  therevnto. 

This  Court  is  dissolved. 


416  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1660.     *Jltt  a  Gennerall  Court  of  Election,  held  at  Boston,  30"'  May,  1660. 

30  May.         TTN"  ENDECOTT,  Es^,  was  chosen  Gouerno''  for  j"  yeere   ensuing,  & 
[*336.]      J         ^^^^g  j^g  ^j^jl^_ 

Rich  Bellinghani,  Es^,  was  chosen  Dep'  Goiino'",  &  tooke  his  oath. 

was  chosen  1  coiiiission^ 


were    chosen   Asistants,  &    tooke    theire 
was  chosen  Mj'^  Gen  &  coinissio.     [oathes. 

Cofnissioner  in  reserve, 
chosen  Tresurer. 


M'  Symon  Bradstreet, 

M'  Sam  Symons, 

Cap?  Tho  Wiggin, 

Capt  DanT  Gookin, 

Majo'  Dam  Denison, 

Majo'  Symon  Willard, 

Majo'^  Humphrey  Atherton, 

M''  Richard  Russell  was 

M^  Tho  Danforth, 

M'  Edward  Rawson  was  chosen  Secretary. 

Majo"'  Hauthorn  was  chosen  2'*  Comissioner  in  reserve. 

The  names  of  the  Deputjes  retournd  to  serve  at  y^  Gennerall  Court: 

Majo'  W"  Hawthorn,  M'  Hen  Bartholmew,  for  Salem. 

Capt  Fraimcis  Norton,  Left  Rich  Sprauge,  Charles  Toune. 

Left  Roger  Clap,  EnsI  Hopstill  Foster,  Dorchester. 

Cap?  Tho  Sauage,  M"^  Antho  Stoddard,  Boston. 

M'  W"  Parkes,  M'  Jn°  Rugles,  Roxbury. 

M"-  Ephrajra  Child,  Cap?  Hugh  Mason,  Water  Toune. 

Cap?  Tho  Marshall,  Lynn. 

M"^  Edw  Collings,  M-^  Edw  Oakes,  Cambridge. 

]\jr  ytfm  Hubbard,  M"^  Georg  Gittings,  Ipswich. 

M'  Edw  Woodman,  Newbury. 

M'  Thomas  Dyer,  Weimouth. 

Cap?  Joshua  Hubbard,  Hingham. 

M"'  Tho  Brookes,  Concord. 

Cap?  Eliaz'  Lusher,  Dedam. 

M""  Edw  Holiock,  Springfeild. 

M'  Christopher  Batt,  M'  Tho  Bradbury,  Salisbury. 

Lef?  Christo  Hussey,  Hampton. 

M''  Joseph  Jewett,  Rouley. 

M'^  Peter  Bracket,  Brauntryc. 

Cap?  Rich  Waldderne,  Doner. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 

M'  Hen  Sherborn,  Portsmouth. 

M"'  Edw  Conuerse,  Wooboume. 

M'^  Humphry  Chadbourne,  Kittery. 

M""  Ed\v  Rushworth,  Yorke. 

M''  Rich  Hitchcoke,  Saco. 

M"'  Hen  Jocelyn,  for  Scarborough  &  Falmouth. 

Cap?  Tho  Sauage  was  chosen  Speaker  for  y'  session. 

It  being  the  great  duty  of  this  Court  to  provide  that  all  places  &  people 
•w'*'in  our  gates  be  suppljed  of  an  able  &  faithfull  ministry  of  Gods  holy 
word,  bee  it  therefore  ordered  and  enacted  by  this  Court  and  the  authority 
thereof,  that  the  County  Courts  in  theire  respective  precincts  doe  dilligently  & 
carefully  attend  the  execution  of  such  orders  of  this  Court  as  concernes  the 
majnetenance  of  the  ministry,  &  the  purging  of  theire  tounes  &  peculiars  from 
such  ministry  &  publicke  preachers  as  shallbc  found  vitious  in  theire  Hues  or 
pernitiously  hetlirodoxe  in  theire  doctrines,  and  for  all  places  destitute  of  an 
able  &  faithfull  ministry,  that  they  vse  theire  best  endeavo'  for  the  procuring 
&  setUng  of  such  ftiithfull  laborers  in  Gods  vjneyard,  and  that  the  charge  of 
theire  procuring  &  setlinge  be  levjed  on  the  inhabitants,  as  the  law  for  majnte- 
nance  of  ministers  directs ;  and  that,  for  the  future,  there  may  be  no  neglect 
hereof,  the  president  *of  each  County  Court  shall  duely  from  tjme  to  tjme  [*337.] 
give  it  in  charge  to  tlie  grand  juries  of  theire  respective  Courts,  to  present  all  Provicionfor 
abuses  &  neglects  of  this  kinde,  &  that  w"^  all  care  &  dilligence  the  same  be  try. 
redressed,  that  so  the  name  of  the  Lord  our  God  being  kuoune  in  oui-  dwell- 
ings &  exalted  in  our  gates,  he  may  still  delight  in  vs  to  continue  his  favorable 
presence  w""  vs,  &  our  vnparraleld  enjoyments,  both  temporall  &  spirittuall, 
which,  through  the  rich  mercy  of  God  in  Christ,  hitherto  wee  haue  enjoyed, 
and  not  be  provoked,  thro  our  prophane  slighting  &  despising  thereof,  to 
bereave  vs  &  our  posteritjes  of  such  chojce  mercjes. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  hereafter  no  cottage  or  dwelling  place  shallbe  admit-  Touneships 

—  1      •     1  o    1       1  1         priviledge. 

ted  to  the  priviledg  of  comonage  for  wood,  timber,  6c  herbage,  or  any  other 

the  priviledges  that  lye  in  coiiion  in  any  toune  or  peculjar,  but  such  as  already 

are  in  being  or  hereafter  shallbe  erected  by  the  consent  of  the  toune. 

This  Court,  taking  into  theii'e  serious  consideration  the  present  sad  &  Day  of  humil- 

~     ,       liation. 

deplorable  condition  of  our  deere  natiue  countrje,  as  well  by  reason  oi  the 
great  distractions  in  that  coinonwcalth  as  also  those  many  provocations  of  the 
Lords  displeasure  by  those  horrid  blasphemjes  &  wickednesses  that  there 
abound,  &  the  many  clouds  houering  ouer  them,  threatning  the  vtter  frustrat- 

VOL.  IV. PART   I.  53 


418  THE  KECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


30  May. 


10  60.      ing  of  those   hopeful!  beginings   where  with   of  late  yeares   the   Lord  was 
""''^       '    pleased  to  favor,  not  only  them  &  vs,  bnt  also  his  name  &  cause  w'^all  ;  — 

As  also  for  our  oune  conditjon,  altho  at  present  his  wonted  favors,  both 
temporall  &  spirittuall,  are,  through  his  rich  &  vndescrved  mercy,  continewed 
to  vs,  yet  great  reason  wee  haue  to  be  seucible  of  our  great  declensions  from 
those  primitive  affections,  as  well  to  the  Lord,  his  blessed  ordinances  &  govern- 
ment, as  also  one  to  another,  when  thro  so  much  vnspeakable  mercy  he  allured 
vs  to  follow  him  into  this  wilderncsse,  as  also  the  litle  of  his  image  that  doth 
as  yet  appeare  in  the  rising  generation  ;  — 

This  Court  doe  judge  meete  that  the  one  &  twentjcth  day  of  this  instant 
moneth  be  sett  apart  by  all  the  inhabitants  of  this  colony,  &  by  them  kept  a 
solemne  day  of  humilliation  for  tbe  imploring  of  the  Lords  favorable  presence 
yet  to  be  continewed  w""  our  deare  natiue  countrje,  &  that  the  issue  of  all  theire 
vnsetlements  &  ouerturnings  in  church  &  state  may  be  the  advancement  of 
the  kingdome  of  the  Lord  Jesus,  &  setting  vp  of  his  throane  in  that  land 
whose  right  it  is,  and  for  ourselves,  that  he  would  be  pleased  yett  to  continew 
the  angell  of  his  presence  w""  vs  in  these  our  wilderness  travailes,  &  his 
blessing  maybe  vpon  vs  from  the  begining  of  the  ycare  vnto  the  end  thereof, 
&  in  speciall  that  his  arme  &  power  maybe  revealed  to  the  hearts  of  our  poore 
children  in  theire  attendance  on  the  Lords  holy  ordinances,  that  so,  not  only 
wee,  but  ours  after  vs,  in  this  wanton  &  decrying  age,  may  w"*  full  purpose 
of  heart  cleaue  to  the  Lord  &  all  his  ajipointmcnts  in  his  house,  &  wee  may 
not  only  haue  them  yet  continued  to  ourselves,  but  also  leaue  them  as  a 
legatje  from  the  Lord  Jesus  to  our  posterity  after  vs. 
Charge  of  hues  For  the  regulating  &  setling  the  charge  of  prosecution  of  hues  &  cryes, 

''^^^'  it  is  ordered,  that  what  shall  arise  by  occasion  of  escape  from  the  countrjes 

prison,  or  flight  from  authoritje,  to  avojde  the  same,  shall  be  pajd  by  the 
Tresurer  of  the  country;  and  such  as  arise  by  flying  from  any  of  our  county 
prisons,  or  to  escape  any  of  them,  shall  be  defrajed  by  the  Treasurer  of  that 
county  where  the  occasion  arise ;  and  such  persons  as  procure  hues  &  crjes 
vpon  theire  oune  particcular  occasions  shall  beare  all  the  charge  arising  there- 
from, provided  due  accounts  be  made  by  such  as  demand  pay. 
Free  for  any  It  is  ordered,  y'  the  law  prohibbiting  bringing  in  of  mault  from  foreigne 

mault"^ '"        Pt6s  is  repealed,  so  farr  as  it  respecteth  y"  importation  of  mault. 

r*338.1  *Whereas  it  is  found  by  experjence,  that  houses  licensed  for  entertajne- 

Bostons  power  ment  of  straungers  are  to  much  frequented  by  the  inhabitants  of  the  same 

fences  about      tounes,  wherein  they  are  too  excessiue  in  drhicking,  vnproffltable  expence  of 

inkeep's.  {jmc  &  money,  &  especially  in  the  tonne  of  Boston,  w"^''  to  prevent,  this  Court 

doth  order  &  hereby  declare,  that  for  this  present  yeare  ensuing,  the  comis- 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  419 

sioners  and  selectmen  of  the  toune  of  Boston,  or  the  majo''  parte  of  them, 
shall  &  hereby  are  enipowred  &  authorized  to  make  such  orders  respecting 
theire  oune  toune  to  prevent  the  aforesajd  abuses  as  they  shall  thinke  meete, 
&  to  annex  suitable  fines  or  other  punishments  thorevnto. 

Att  the  motion   of  some   of  Boston  inhabitants,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  Boston  select- 
select  men  of  that  toune  from  tjme  to  tjme  shall  &  hereby  are  impowred  to  f^paL""""* 
order  the  improovement  &  feeding  of  theire  coinons  w"'in  the  necke  of  land  <^°"^°'^- 
by  such  catle  as  they  shall  judge  meete,  any  lawe,  vsage,  or  custome  to  the 
contrary  notw*standing. 

The  whole  Court  mett  together  sent  for  Mary  Dyer,  who  rebelljously,  Mary  Djera 
after  sentence  of  death  past  against  hir,  returned  into  this  jurisdiction.  Being 
come  before  the  Court,  she  acknouledged  hirself  to  be  Mary  Dyer,  the  per- 
son, &  was  condemned  by  this  Court  to  death.  Being  asked  what  she  had  to 
say  why  y'  sentence  should  not  be  executed,  she  gaue  no  other  ans'',  but  y' 
she  denjed  our  lawe,  came  to  beare  witnes  against  it,  &  could  not  choose  but 
come  &  doe  as  formerly.  The  whole  Court  mett  together  voted,  that  the  sajd 
!Mary  Dyer,  for  hir  rebelljously  returning  into  this  jurisdiction,  (notw^'stand- 
ing  the  favo''  of  this  Court  towards  hir,)  shall  be,  by  y"  marshall  gcnerall,  on 
the  first  day  of  June,  about  nine  of  the  clocke  in  the  morning,  carrjed  to  the 
place  of  execution,  and,  according  to  the  sentence  of  the  Generall  Court  in 
October  last,  be  put  to  death ;  that  the  secretary  issue  out  warrant  accordingly ; 
•w'^^  sentence  y*  GoQno''  declared  to  hir  in  open  Court;  &  warrant  issued  out 
accordingly  to  Edward  ISIichelson,  marshall  geunerall,  &  to  Capt  James 
Oliuer,  &  his  order,  as  foriuly. 

Whereas  Joseph  Nicholson,  &  Jane,  his  wife,  Quakers,  formerly  banished     31  May,  60. 
this  jurisdiccon,  on  pajue  of  death,  (&  being,  contrary  to  the  sentence  of  the  ^°°'^^  scnteno 
Court,  found  w^'in  the  same,)  were  apprehended  &  coiiiitted  to  prison,  —  this  Jane  Nichol- 
Court,  hauing    called  the    sajd  Josej)h,  &  Jane,   his   wife,   before   them,   & 
examined  them  of  the  grounds  of  theire  not  depture,  doe  judge   meete  so 
farre  to   declare   theire  further   clemency,  as  yett   to    giue  them  respit,  on 
pcenalty  of  theire   former   sentance,  to   depart   this  jurisdiccon   by  the   next 
fowerth  day  ,•  and  if  they,  or  either  of  them,  after  that  day  shall  be  found  in 
any  pte  of  the  same,  they  shall  againe  be  aphended  by  any  magistrate,  coinis- 
sioner,  constable,  or  other  person,  &  brought  to  the  prison  at  Boston,  where 
they  shall  be  kept  close  prisoners,  &  being  legally  convicted  thereof,  shall  be 
put  to  death. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Quakers  now  in  prison  shall  there  remajne  vntill  Order  for  triaU 
the  next  Court  of  Asistants,  &  that  then  they  shall  be  hjed  by  a  jury,  accord-  °  ^ 
ing  as  the  law  provides  in  that  case. 


31  May. 
An'  to  M' 


420  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  6  G  0.  In  ans'  to  y*  petlcbn  of  Edmond  Greenlefe,  the  Court,  hauing  pvsed  his 

petition,  doe  order,  that  the  petitioner  haue  a  new  hearing  of  his  case  betweene 
him  &  Nathaniell  Boulter  at  y'  next  Coin-t  of  Asistants. 
Grcenlefs  *-^r  j^jj^  Webster,  Senio'',  of  the  new  tonne  at  Norwottock,  is  by  this 

peticon. 

r(iK,<,Q  1  Court  comissionated  w""  magistratticall  power  for  the  yeare  ensuing,  to  act  in 
M'  Websters  ^^^  civiU  &  criminall  cases,  as  any  one  magistrate  may  doe,  and  that  he  joyne 
power.  .^th  j^^g  comissioners  in  keeping  the  Courts  at  Springfeild. 

M'  Brad-  "Whereas  this  Court  hath  heeretofore  graunted  to  the  honnored  M'^  Brad- 

Symon'ds  Ma-  street,  M"^  Symonds,  &  Majo''  Gennerall  Denison  seuerall  tracts  of  lands, 
jor  Denissona  -vvhich  the  sajd  gent",  vpon  the  earnest  desire  of  this  Court  for  the  accoinoda- 
tion  of  the  new  toune  vpon  Conecticott  Riuer,  were  content  to  resigne  vp 
theire  interest,  in  consideration  whereof,  this  Court  doth  graunt  as  an  adition 
to  theire  former  graunts,  as  is  hereafter  exprest,  viz' :  To  M"'  Bradstreet  three 
hundred  acres,  to  M"^  Symonds  one  hundred  acres,  and  to  Majo'  Denison  three 
hundred  acres ;  and  that  these  gent",  or  any  or  either  of  them,  shall  haue 
liberty  to  take  vp  theire  sajd  tracts  of  land  in  any  place  or  places  vpon  the 
west  side  of  the  sajd  riuer,  provided  that  it  be  full  sixe  miles  from  the  place 
now  intended  for  Northampton  meeting  house,  vpon  a  streight  Ijne  ;  or  if  they 
or  either  of  them  shall  not  thinke  meete  to  accept  of  theire  land  in  the  place 
Hadley.  aboue  mentioned,  that  then  they  &  either  of  them  shall  haue  libertje  to  take 

it  elsewhere  in  any  place  not  impropriated  to  tounes  or  persons  w^'in  this  juris- 
diction, provided  that  M'  Bradstreet  shall  haue  the  first  chojce,  &  also  that 
neither  of  them  take  it  in  aboue  two  places. 

Vpon  a  motion  made  in  the  behalfe  of  the  toune  of  Salem,  this  Court 
doth  order  &  empower  Majo''  W™  Hauthome,  in  the  toune  where  he  dwells, 
to  act  in  all  criminall  cases,  binding  ouer  offendo''s,  giving  oathes  in  all  civill 
cases,  &  marriages,  as  any  one  magistrate  may  doe,  &  this  power  to  continew 
till  the  next  Court  of  Election. 
None  freemen  This  CoiU't,  hauing  considered  of  the  proposalls  presented  to  this  Court 

u  sue   asar    ,     seuerall  of  the  inhabitants  of  the  county  of  Midlesex,  doe  declare  &  order, 

m  full  comn-         -^  j  j  f 

'0°-  that  no  man  whosoeuer  shall  be  admitted  to  the  freedom   of  this  body  politic 

days  only.  biit  such  as  are  members  of  some  church  of  Christ,  and  in  full  coinnion,  w'^'' 
they  declare  to  be  y^  true  intent  of  y'  anncient  lawe,  page  y^  8  of  y"*  2'^  booke, 
anno  g''  1631 ;  and  doe  further  order,  that  from  henceforth  there  shall  be  but 
sixe  trayning  dayes  in  a  yeare,  any  lawe,  vsage,  or  customc  to  the  contrary 
notw*''standing. 
M'Knowles  j^^  j^  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  ISIajo'"  Nicolas  Shapleigh  &  INI'  Abra- 

land  to  be  layd  •'  '  j  r       o 

out  to  M'Hau-  ham  Preble  shall  &  hereby  are  impowred  to  lay  out  unto  Majo'  W™  Hauthome, 

thorne  or  his 

assignes.  or  his  assigncs,  that  parccll  of  land  that  this  Court  bought  of  M''  Knowles, 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  421 

lying  ill  Kcttcry  &  abutting  on  riscataq.  Riucr,  formerly  graunted  vnto  the  sajd      1  6  G  0, 
INfajo'"  Hauthorne,  in  refFerenc  to  twenty  pounds  due  to  him  from  the  country,  "'' 

as  coiiiissioncrs,  &:  the  sajd  gent"  to  make  retunie  thereof  to  the  Court. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  henceforth  the  clarke  of  the  writts  shall  demand  of      [*340.] 
such  as  receive  attachments  of  them  three  pence  a  peece  more  then  formerly,  Clirke  of  y 

writts  to  re- 
in behalfe  of  the  marshall  generall,  w'^''  shall  be  in  Icjw  of  that  three  pence  on  spond  the  mar 

attachm  by  a  formei'  lawe  he  was  to  receive  of  the  counstables  or  county  mar-  3d  attach. 

shalls,  &  that  the  counstables  shall  hauc  but  twelve  penc  vpon  an  attachment,  as 

formerly. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticSn  of  Edward   Carrington,  itt  is  ordered,  that    the  Ans'  to  Ed- 
County  Court  of  Midlesex  shall  &  hereby  is  impowred  to  examine  how  the  tonspetiCon. 
fines  imposed  ou  Maulden  were  assessed,  &  to  make  such  regulation  therein, 
and  impower  the  petitioner  to  gather  his  part  according  to  theire  order,  or 
make  such  abatement  as  in  theire  wisdomes  they  shall  thinke  meete. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticbn  of  Anne  Cartar,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  peticbner  Ans'  to  Anne 
haue  liberty  to  cleere  hir  innocency  before  the  next  County  Court,  in  July  ^"'"'*  P^*'" 
next,  at  Boston,  by  action  or  otherwise. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  seuerall  of  the  inhabitants  of  Newbury,  it  is  Graunt  of  new 

Dili. Tit    to  ^Jg^V" 

ordered,  that  M'  Edward  Eishworth  &  Robert  Booth  shall  &  hereby  are  ap-  ^^j^.  j^g^  ^^  ^g 

pointed  to  lay  out  the  bounds  of  theire  graunts  vpon  Saco  Kiuer,  making  re-  '"'J*^  ""'• 

turne  thereof  to  this  Court,  &  that  the  peticoners,  for  theire  encouragement 

in  so  remote  a  place,  be  exempted  from  all  publicke  rates  for  sixe  yeares  now 

next  coining,  for  all  theire  estates  there,  provided  that  they  haue  twenty  fam- 

iljes  &  an  able  minister,  such  as  shall  be  approoved  of  by  this  Court,  setled 

there  in  fewer  yeeres. 

In  ans''  to   the  peticon  of  seuerall  the  inhabitants  of  Ipswich,  this  Court  Ipsuich  new 

.     1        ,     .  1  •  •  •  -1  111   plfintaCon. 

judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  the  petitioners  sixe  miles  square,  or  so  much  land  y^j^       ggg 

as  shall  be  contejned  in  such  a  compasse,  in  a  place  ncre  Quobogg  Ponds,  pro-  ^'■^^• 

vidcd  they  haue  twenty  familyes  there  resident  w*''in  three  yeeres,  &  that  they 

haue  an  able  minister  setled  there  w^in  the  sajd  terme,  such  as  this  Court 

shall  approove,  and  that  they  make  due  provission  in  some  way  or  other  for 

the  future,  either  by  setting  a  part  of  land,  or  w'  else  shall  be  thought  meete 

for  the  continuance  of  the  ministry  amongst  them  ;  and  that  if  they  shall  faile 

in  any  of  the  particculars  aboue  mentioned,  this  graunt  of  the  Court  to  be  voyd 

&  of  none  effect. 

In  ans'  to  the  request  of  JI'  John  Croad,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  secretary  Ans'  to  Jn» 
deliuer  him  vp  his  bond  wherein  he  stood  bound  for  Edw  Wharton.  '^^ 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  y"  selectmen  of  Salem,  humbly  craning  the  Ans'  to  Salem 
favor  of  this  Court  to  graunt  them   the   propriety  of   the  ilands  called  the  ^^ 


422 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1660. 


[*341.] 

Suffolke, 
Midlesex,  & 
Essex. 


Cap'  Edw. 
Johnson,  An- 
tho.  Stoddard, 
for  W-  Parks 
comiss.  survei's 
gen.  office. 


Surveyors,  &c, 
couiission. 


Miserjes  &  Bakers  Island,  the  Court  judgeth  it  not  mcete  to  grannt  tlieire 
request. 

In  ans''  to  the  iietition  of  John  rhilHps,  craning  the  confirmation  of  a 
sale  of  certaine  lands  by  Frauncis  Smale,  W^  he  bought  of  Skittery  Gussett, 
an  Indian  sagamore,  &  the  Court  doe  judge  meete  to  leaue  the  peticoner  to  a 
due  course  of  lawe  for  vindicating  of  his  oune  right. 

*ror  the  more  aequall  distribution  of  the  law  bookes  when  they  shall  be 
printed,  it  is  ordered  by  this  Court  &  the  authoritje  thereof,  that  the  printer 
shall  deliuer  tlie  sajd  bookes  to  the  country  Tresurer  as  soone  as  they  are 
past  the  presse,  who,  iiiiediately  vpon  receaving  of  them,  shall  deliuer,  or 
cause  to  be  deliuei;pd,  to  euery  magistrate  one  ;  to  euery  deputy  of  tliis  Gennerall 
Court  one  ;  to  the  secretary  &  clarke  of  the  deputjcs  one  a  peece  for  themselv:, 
&  three  a  jjeece  to  be  kept  for  the  Generall  Courts  vse  ;  to  the  recorder  or 
clarke  of  euery  County  Court  three  a  peece,  to  be  kept  for  the  vse  of  the 
seuerall  Courts  ;  &  the  remainder  of  the  sajd  bookes  the  Tresurer  shall  send  to 
euery  county  Tresurer  such  a  proportion  as  is  due  to  each  county  according 
to  what  chardge  they  beare  in  tlie  country  rate ;  and  the  county  Tresurers  are 
hereby  enjoyned  to  send  vnto  euery  toune  in  the  respective  countjes  theire 
tonnes  proportion,  according  to  the  rule  aboue  mentioned,  &  deliuer  the  same 
to  some  meete  person  implojed  by  each  toune  to  receave  them,  engaging  to 
sattisfy  the  Tresurer  for  tliem  according  to  his  disbursments,  y'  so  no  charge 
be  put  vpon  the  country  for  y"  same,  as  Capt  Gooking,  the  Tresurer  of  y" 
country,  &  Tresurer  of  each  county  shall  determine,  both  for  peice  &  quallitje 
of  pay ;  and  that  provission  be  made  for  the  easterne  parts,  it  is  ordered,  that 
before  the  divition  there  be  fiffty  bookes  lajd  a  part  for  theire  supply,  they 
making  like  payment  to  the  country  Tresurer  for  the  same ;  and  that  Ports- 
mouth &  Doner  haue  twenty  bookes  lajd  aside  for  tirem  on  y"  same  termes  ; 
and  it  is  fuither  ordered,  that  M""  Thomas  Danforth,  who  was  to  liaue  the 
ouersight  of  the  impression,  make  an  index  to  y°  sajd  booke  w*''all  convenjent 
speede,  that  so  tlie  worke  may  be  no  longer  delajed. 

It  being  of  great  concernment  that  the  office  of  survejo""  gennerall  be 
suppljed  w"'out  further  delay,  it  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  M"^ 
Anthony  Stoddard,  &  Deacon  Willjara  Parkes  be  coiiiissioners  for  that  service, 
the  act  of  any  t«o  whereof  shall  be  accompted  legall,  and  that  the  accounts 
of  theire  annuall  disbursments  &;  stocke  in  hand  be  deliuered  vnder  theire 
hands,  w"^*"  the  place  or  places  where  such  stocke  doe  rest,  to  the  Tresurer  of 
the  country. 

Whereas  Capt  Edward  Johnson,  M'  Anthony  Stoddard,  &  Deacon  W™ 
Parkes  are  by  this  Court  nominated  &  appointed  a  comittee  to  officiate  the  office 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS   BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  423 

of  survejo""  genneniU  of  the  countrjes  amunicon,  they,  or  any  two  of  them,  are 
by  this  Court  impowred  to  take  into  yo'  care  &  possession  all  the  countrjes 
annes  &  amunition,  &  the  same  safely  keejio  or  dispose  of  according  to  the 
orders  of  this  Court,  or  by  speciall  order  from  the  councill  of  this  coiiion- 
wealth ;  and  w'  armes,  amvmition,  or  artilliry  they  shall  so  receive  or  hereafter 
shall  purchase  for  the  countrjes  vse  they  shall  annually  giue  an  account 
thereof  to  the  Court  of  Election ;  and  that  they  keepe  in  a  booke  a  true  in- 
ventory, fairely  written,  of  all  the  countrys  aiiinition  ;  and  power  is  hereby 
given  vnto  them,  or  any  two  of  them,  for  the  recoucry  of  what  shallbe  found 
due  to  the  country  from  any  toune  or  person  in  this  jurisdiction  in  refference 
to  amies,  ainnition,  &(3. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Jefterys  Creeke,  it  is  ordered, 
that  M'  "W""  Steevens,  W™  Bennet,  Ensigne  Howlet,  M'  Henry  Bartholomew, 
&  M'  Joseph  Jewet  doe  vejw  the  bounds  in  theire  peticon  mentioned  some- 
times before  the  next  Court,  and  on  the  place  to  vcjw  &  make  report  where 
they  conceaue  it  mo*  just  the  bounds  of  each  place  shoidd  be  &  lye. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Willjam  Jeft'eray,  making  claime  to  JefFcrays  Ans'  to  M' 
Necke,  nere  Ipswich,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  petitioner  shall  haue  liberty  to  petiCo"/.' 
make  good  his  plea  before  the  whole  Court,  at  such  time  as  the  Court  shall 
see  meete. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Henry  Bennet,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  petitioner  Ans'  to  Hen. 
shall  haue  liberty  to  cleare  his  oune  innocency  before  the  whole  Court,  w'=''  if  -  '^""'^  ^  ^^ 
he  cann  doe,  they  judge  it  reason  that  his  fine  be  remitted,  or  otherwise  that 
he  be  dealt  w"'  for  his  impetuous  spirit  ag'  authoritje. 

*Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Tresurcr  doe  forthwith  procure  about  twenty      [*342.] 
barrells  of  powder,  and  that  annually  there  be  the  like  quantitje  provided  out  Order  for  conn- 

/.      .  o    1  11  •  f  ^^'^  store  of 

of  the  custome  of  wines  &  beavar,  &  that  the  same  be  improoved  for  no  other  powder, 
vse  vntill  such  supply  be  made  annually  for  the  countrys  vse,  and  that  the 
survejors  for  the  countrjes  amunition  doe  joyne  w"'  the  Tresurer  heerein. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  M''  Richard  Russell,  Cap?  Edward  Johnson,  M''  An-  Comittees 
thony  Stoddard,  and  Deacon  Willjam  Parkes  shall  &  hereby  are  impowred  ''""^'^ffu   '' 
as  a  coinittee  to  agree  w""  Cap?  Frauncis  Norton,  or  any  other,  about  the  cus-  cus'ome  of 

wines. 

tome  of  wines,  the  w"^*"  is  to  be  improoved  for  buying  of  ponder,  at  the  least 
tenn  barrells  p  ann. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticSn  of  Samuell  Bemet,  humbly  craving  the  remittmet  Ans' to  Sam. 
or  abatement  of  a  fine  formerly  imposed  on  him,  the  Court  judgeth  it  not  j^^ 
meet  to  grant  his  request,  the  Court  in  May,   1657,   hauing  giuen  ans''  to 
his  jjeticon  in  like  kind. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  Henry  Pouning,  John  Grouer,  Willjam  Halsey, 


424  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  fi  G  0.      Thomas  Hally,  Thomas  Stocker,  &  James  Hill,  humbly  crauing  the  graunt  of 

'"  a  sufHcjent  quantity  of  land  to  make  a  plantation  at  a  place  called  by  y"  name 

of  Stony  Rluer,  on  both  sides  the  way  to  Conecticott,  &(3,  the  Court  iudgeth 

New  plantacon  J  '  .'  >         '  J       o 

at  Stony  Riuer,  it  meete  to  graunt  this  petlcon,  viz':  seven  miles  square,  fine  yeares  exemp- 

on  Conecticott      .^  ,.  -,,  .,.« 

■way.  tion  from  publicke  rates  for  theue  estates  there,  provided  that  m  fower  yeeres 

they  haue  twenty  familyes  setled  there,  and  an  able  minister ;  otherwise  these 
graunts  to  be  voyd. 
The  Courts  Whereas  luly  Symon  Lynde  hath  binu  often  implojed  by  this  Court  for- 

acres  to  m"  merly,  and  now  also,  to  interprett  the  letters  which  haue  binn  sent  from  the 
Simon  Lrnde.  Dutch  gouerno"^  to  this  C'ourt,  and  this  Court  being  likely  to  improove  him  in 
such  respect,  &  his  readines  from  tjme  to  tjme  to  attend  the  Court  &  serve 
them  therein,  as  neede  maybe,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  him  two 
hundred  acres  of  land  in  any  place  not  yett  disposed  of,  nor  hindering  a 
plantacon. 
Ans'  to  Brain-  In  ans''  to  thc  petition  of  the  tounesmen  of  Braintry,  the  Court  judgeth 

it  meete  to  allow  them  tenn  pounds  for  this  present  yearc  out  of  theire  coun- 
try rate,  in  refference  to  theire  great  chardges  about  Frizell. 
Major  Denni-  The  place  On  the  other  side  IMerremacke,  about  sixe  miles  aboue  An- 

„       '  doner,   reserved  till  this  Court,  at  the  request  of  the  majo'  genell,  is  still 

lectnien  to  be    reserved  till  the  next  Court.      And  it  is  fui'ther  ordered,  that  the  tounesmen 

sent  for. 

of  Hauerill  be  required  by  warrant  from  the  secretary  to  appeare  at  the  next 
sessions  of  this  Court,  to  shew  a  reason  why  they  haue  marked  bounds  trees  at 
so  great  a  distance  from  theire  toune  vp  Meremacke  Riuer,  and  also  to  giue 
an  account  of  the  bounds  of  theire  toune,  and  vpon  what  right  they  lay  clajme 
to  so  long  a  tract  of  land. 
Coinittee  to  Itt  is  Ordered,  that  ^Majo""  Himiphry  x\therton,  M'  Jn"  Pinchon,  &  Lef  I 

runne  y«  south  _-.  /-ninoii  •  i  •  ri  •  ri 

Ivne,  Major       -Koger  Clap  shall  (X   hereby  are  impowred  as  a  comittee  lor  tlie  runmg  ot  the 

Atherton,  <s.c.  gouth  lyne  of  this  colony,  &  the  same  to  be  continewed  forty  miles,  more  or 
lessc,  on  the  south  west  of  Hudsons  Eiuer,  and  to  agree  w*''  such  artists  as 
they  may  best  gajne  for  the  effecting  thereof,  &  all  theire  chardges  to  be  re- 
pajd  by  the  Tresurer  of  the  country. 

Courts  graunt  In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Whipsufferage  planters,  this  Court,  consider- 

9  Tt,"  "'  in^  theire  former  obstruccons,  doe  confirme  theire  graunt  &  lands  thereof,  as 

age  iX  JM'  c>  7  o  ' 

Chauncey.  jj  -^^s  layd  out  by  the  coinittee  impowred  thereto  by  this  Court,  in  case  they 
proceed  in  planting  the  same,  according  to  the  intent  of  the  Court  in  theire 
first  graunt,  &  the  same  accomplished  w"'in  two  yeares  next  ensuing.  And  it 
is  ordered,  that  the  name  of  the  sajd  plantation  shall  be  called  Marlborow,  and 
.  that  M'  Chauncey  be  by  them  repajd  all  his  charges  expended  in  laying  out 
his  farme  in  y'  place ;  &  he  hath  liberty  to  lay  out  the  same  in  any  lands  not 
formerly  graunted  by  this  Court. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  425 

*Itt  Is  ordered,  that  if  Cap?  Edward  Johnson  shall  not  in  all  respects      1  G  G  0. 
observe  &  performe  the  order  or  graimt  of  this  Court  in  October  last  for  the    '       '^       ^ 
laying  out  of  his  farme  on  the  ternies  &  in  the  place  in  that  order  mentioned  \' 

before  the  next  sessions  of  this  Court,  &  make  his  rctournc  thereof,  that  then  „ 

Courts  yraun  I 

M"'  Samuell  Cole  shall  haue  &  enjoy  the  whole  fiunie  as  it  was  by  him  lajd  to  M' Cole  in 

case,  &c. 

out  &  returned,  any  thing  in  the  former  order  notw^'standing,  M''  Cole  giving 
him  a  coppy  of  this  order  once  w"'in  three  weekes. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  coiSittee  formerly  appointed  by  this  Court  in  the  Comittec  be- 

twcnc  Ctinrls 

case  of  Charles  Toune  &  Tho  Gold  doe  giue  notice  to  both  parties  that  they  at-  xoune  &  Tho 
tend  the  issue  of  the  case  in  controuersie  at  such  time  &  place  as  they  contriue  ^°''^' 
best,  and  that  if  Charls  Toune  doe  neglect  the  further  issue  thereof,  that  then 
they  pay  the  deffendant  his  costs,  or  otherwise  that  the  merrit  of  the  cause  be 
determined  in  the  first  place. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Thomas  Sauage,  Cap?  Frauncis  Norton,  Cap?  Coimttcc  to 
Eliazer  Lusher,  &  M''  Anthony  Stoddard,  they  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  &  ^l^^  accompts. 
hereby  are  appointed  a  coiiiittee  to  take  the  accompts  of  the  Tresurer  in  the 
behalfe  of  the  country,  &  to  present  the  same  to  the  next  sessions   of  this 
Court. 

In  ans""  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Portsmouth,  it  is  ordered,  y'  Comittee  ab« 
M""  Edward  Woodman,  W  Joseph  Jewett,  &  M."  Thomas  Bradbury  shall  &  ^.^  '"""^   ' 
hereby  are  appointed  a  coiiiittee,  &  impowred  to  repaire  to  Portsmouth,  & 
there  to  examine  the  ground  of  y"'  complaint  mentioned  in  the  peticon,  &  make 
report  of  what  they  find  to  the  next  Court  of  Election. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Oyster  Riuer,  it  is  ordered,  Ans' to  Oyster 
that  Majo'  Atherton  joyne  w"'  Cap?  Wiggens  in  keeping  the  next  County  ^j"  ^ '""  ' 
Court  at  Strawbery  Bancke  &  Yorke,  and  that  he,  w"'  the  rest  of  the  comis- 
sioiiers  joyned  w*  him  for  examining  &  setling  the  respective  interests  & 
rights  of  M"'  Foxwell,  Jourdan,  &  Phillips,  doe  heare,  examine,  &  determine 
the  matter  in  difference  betweene  Doner  &  Oyster  Bluer,  and  that  all  parties 
concerned  therein  doe  attend  the  same  at  Strawbery  Bancke  at  the  aforesajd 
Court,  and  that  any  three  of  the  comissioners,  Majo'  Atherton  being  one,  be 
impowred  to  act  in  all  the  premisses. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Richard  Stacy,  the  Court,  on  perusall  thereof,  Ans'  to  Rich- 
judge  meete  not  to  graunt  the  same,  saue  only  for  the  confirmation  of  the  In-  petiCon. 
dians  sale  so  farr  as  it  respecteth  such  lands  as  are  his  propriety,  according  to 
y*  lawe  of  this  Court,  declaring  the  Indians  right. 

Wee,  whose  names  are   herevnder  written,  being  chosen  by  the   toime 
of  Cape  Porpus  and  Wells  for  the  laying  out  of  the  dividing  Ijne  of  each 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  54 


426 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


IGGO. 

31  May. 
Wells  &  Cap 
Porplis 
bounds. 


toune,  doe  mutually  agree  that  the  Riuer  Kennebucke  shall  be  the  bounds 
of   Cape    Porpus   &  Wells    to    the   vttermost    extent    of    both    the    tounes. 


being   eight  miles  vp  into   the  countrje. 
May,  1660, 


Wittnes    our  hands  this   lO"'  of 

EDMOND   LITLEFEILD, 
WILLJAM   HAMAN, 
W"   SCADLOCK, 
MORGAIN   HOWELL. 


turne. 


The   Court  judgeth  it  nieete  to  grauut  y"  request,  &  allowes  of  y"  re- 


order ab'  M' 
Fletcher,  min- 
ister of  Wells. 


[*346.] 

M' Thorp  to  be 
sent  for  &  ex- 
amined. 


Ans'  to  Zac- 
keus  Golds 
peticon. 


Zackeus  Golds 
fine  remitted. 


Whereas  some  late  difference  seemes  to  appeare  to  vs  betweene  M'^  Fletch- 
er, Juii,  &  part  of  the  inhabitants  of  Wells  as  touching  his  unfittnes  for  the 
place  of  the  ministrje,  w'^''  occasionally  for  neere  two  yeeres  past,  as  is  appre- 
hended, relating  both  to  the  sanctifying  of  the  Saboath  &  the  performance  of 
Gods  holy  worship  therein,  hath  draune  them  into  generall  neglegts,  for  future 
prevention  whereof,  it  is  therefore  ordered  by  the  authority  of  this  Court,  that 
due  notice  be  given  to  the  inhabitants  of  Wells  &  M"^  Fletcher,  that  they  doe 
make  theire  appearances  at  the  next  County  Court  at  Yorke,  there  either  to 
justify  those  exceptions  of  vnmeetnes  they  seeme  to  charge  against  him,  or 
otherwise  from  them  the  sajd  Fletcher  maybe  acquitted. 

[There  are  no  pages  *344,  *31.5.] 

*  Whereas  complaint  hath  binn  made  to  this  Court  ag'  M'  Thorpe,  for  in- 
ordinate driucking  &  other  debojst  carriages,  it  is  ordered,  that  the  County 
Court  of  Yorke  take  notice  thereof,  &  send  for  him,  &  on  what  shall  legally 
appeare  against  him,  to  proceede  therein  according  to  lawe,  &  that  the  grand 
jury  there  haue  speciall  chardg  giuen  them  to  attend  the  execution  of  the  law 
concerning  ministers. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Zackeus  Gold,  itt  is  ordered,  that  Lef  ?  Joshua 
Fisher  &  Ensigne  Thomas  Nojes  shall  &  hereby  are  appointed  a  coinittee  to 
revise  the  act  of  the  coinittee  that  lajd  out  the  Goiin''  ffarme,  as  also  to  heare 
the  pleas  that  any  of  the  adjacent  neighbo''s  cann  object  against  the  lying 
thereof,  and  to  make  report  of  w'  they  finde  vnto  the  next  Court  in  October, 
provided  the  petitioner  be  at  the  charges  that  shall  by  reason  of  this  revejw  be 
expended,  and  that  he  giue  timely  notice  to  all  persons  concerned  therein  to 
attend  the  same. 

The  Court,  on  consideration  of  Zackeus  Golds  great  losse  he  lately  sus- 
teined  by  fire,  judge  meete  to  remitt  his  fine  of  three  pounds  imposed  for  en- 
tertayning  the  Quakers. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  427 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Souther  Toune,  the  Court      1  G  G  0. 
judgeth  it  meete  to  confinne  the  persons  mentioned  in  the  Gennerall  Courts    "       ''        ' 
order  in  October,  1658,  in  theire  seuerall  places,  grauntiug  them  hereby  the  j^  ^,  t  s,'  th 
same  comissiou,  and  in  ciuill  cases  graunting  them  power  to  end  causes  to  "'™  peticon. 
value  of  tenn  pounds,  for  y''  yeare  ensuing,  giving  them  further  power  &  lib- 
erty to  sell  such  skinns  or  hides  of  beasts  they  kill  to  New  London. 

In  ans"'  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Jefferys  Creeke,  itt  is  ordered,  Ans'  to  peticon 
that  jM"-  W"  Steevens,  W'"  Bennet,  Enslgne  Ilowlctt,  M'  Henry  Bartholomew,  j^^^.^f ' 
&  M''  Joseph  Jewett  vejw  the  bounds  in  y"  petition  mentioned,  sometimes  be-  Creeke. 
fore  the  sitting  of  y^  next  sessions,  &  on  the  place  to  vjcw  &  make  returne 
where  they  conceive  it  most  just  the  bounds  of  each  place  should  be  &  lye. 

In  ans""  to  the  petition  of  W'"  Salter,  itt  is  ordered,  that  one  third  of  the  Ans'  to  W" 
charges  for  repairing  of  the  prison  house  be  borne  by  the  county  of  SufFolke, 
&  that  in  consideration  of  tlieire  bennfitt  from  the  sajd  house  for  theire  county 
jajle,  and  also  the  bennefitt  they  haue  by  y"  master  of  y'  house  of  correction, 
his  dwelling  In  the  countrys  house,  the  house  of  correction  being  built  on  the 
countrys  land,  respitting  the  ans'  to  the  other  pte  the  next  session. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  il"'  John  Endecott,  Juii,  humbly  craving  the  con-  Ans' to  M' 
firmation  of  a  deed  of  certaine  lands  to  him  gluen  by  Pompassenoway,  aljas  Old  ^g^^^  peticon. 
Willjam,  &6,  the  Court  doe  not  judge  meete  to  confirme  the  Indians  deed, 
but  considering  y*  many  kindnesses  y'  were  shewne  to  the  Indians  by  o""  hon- 
nored  GoQno''  in  the  infancy  of  these  plantations,  for  the  pacifying  the  In- 
dians, tending  to  the  coiiion  good  of  the  first  planters,  in  consideration  whereof 
the  Indians  were  mooved  to  such  a  gratuity  vnto  his  sonne,  doe  judge  meete 
to  give  y'=  petitioner  fewer  hundred  acres  of  land,  provided  It  be  not  formerly 
graunted,  &  be  no  prejudice  to  any  plantacon,  to  be  sett  out  by  such  a  comit- 
tee  as  this  Court  shall  appoint. 

John  Hurd  &  Nicholas  Hodsden  apearing  before  the   Court   to  glue  an  Courts  judgm« 

lp/»  .  irf^n/-^  ^      •  lo^     ^§'  Hurd  & 

accompt,  the  nrst  tor  not  commg  to  y"  last  (jenll  Court,  beuig  warned,  &c,  Hoddsden. 
professing  his  lamenes  &  vnfittnes  to  travajle,  the  other  for  entertayning  & 
concealing  y^  Quakers,  his  ans'  being  y'  coming  from  worke,  he  found  them 
at  his  house,  not  knowing  them  to  be  such  till  in  discourse  w""  them,  when  he 
warned  them  to  be  gonne,  &d,  the  Court,  hauing  heard  w'  they  could  say, 
ordered  that  they  should  be  admonished  by  the  GoQno'',  notw"'standing  y"'' 
answers. 

*In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Salisbuiy,  the  Coiu-t,  on  a      [*3-17.] 
full  hearing  of  what  all  partjes  concerned  could  say,  judge  meete  to  order, 
that  the  inhabitants  of  Salisbmy,  from  the  twentyeth  of  December,  sixteene 
himdred  fiffty  &  eight,  &  so  forward,  as  long  as  the  new  toune  continews  & 


428 


THE    RECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OP 


1G60. 


31  May. 


Ans'  to  Salis- 
bury petition. 
Natick 
bounds. 


belongs  to  them,  shall  sattisfy  &  pay  vnto  M''  W""  Worcester,  theire  reQend 
pastor,  annually,  the  some  of  fower  score  pounds,  and  that  wheneuer  the 
inhabitants  of  the  new  toune  there  haue  an  able  minister  of  the  gosj)ell  setled 
amongst  them,  w"'  the  approbation  of  the  church  of  Salisbury  &  this  Court, 
and  whiles  such  a  minister  continews  w""  them,  and  provides  for  him,  that 
thenceforth  the  inhabitants  of  the  old  toune  at  Salisbury  shall  pay  &  sattisfy 
theire  reQend  pastor  the  soine  of  seventy  pounds  p  annu,  &  that  in  good 
currant  pay,  as  may  procure  such  things  as  his  family  needs;  and  this  to 
continew  till  this  Court  take  further  order. 

Naticke,  May  10'\  1660. 
The  bounds  of  the  abouesajd  plantation  hauing  binn  measured  out  accord- 
ing to  the  order  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  &  found  to  be  in  quantity  farre  lesse 
then  was  supposed  by  the  coihittee  that  stated  the  same,  &  not  only  so,  but 
the  most  considerable  lands,  both  of  meadow  &  vpland,  taken  vp  by  the 
English  before  the  Indians  graunt,  w'''  tendeth  much  to  the  discouragement 
of  the  poore  natives,  w'=''  are  willing  to  shroud  themselves  vnder  our  pro- 
tection from  the  malice  of  such  as  are  theire  &  our  ennemyes,  wee,  whose 
names  are  subscribed,  considering  the  premisses,  doe  judge  meete,  that  theire 
bounds  on  Sudbury  Riuer  be  continued  one  mile  to  the  westward  of  C'oowa- 
suck  Brooke,  w*  will  be  an  enlargement  neere  halfe  a  mile  in  y'  angle  of 
theire  bounds ;  and  also  that  they  may  banc  liberty  to  seeke  out  eighty  acres 
of  the  ncerest  meadowes,  to  be  added  to  theire  plantation ;  &  that  in  all  other 
respects  theire  bounds  &  limltts  be  confirmed  to  them  as  in  our  former  returne, 
viz',  taking  in  all  the  lands  lying  w'^in  the  sajd  compasse,  adjoyning  to  the 
bounds  of  Sudbury,  Dedham,  &  Water  Toune,  not  formerly  graunted  by  tlie 
Gennerall  Court  to  any  toune  or  perticcular  persons,  the  westerly  Ijnc  is 
runne  almost  halfe  a  point  to  the  southward  of  the  west. 

SYMON  WILLARD, 
HUMPPIREY  ATHAETON, 
THO:  DANFORTH. 

This  Coml  allowes  &  approoves  of  this  returne. 


Courts  judgm«  Tn  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Elias  Parthman,  as  also  the  petition  of  Sarah, 

m  Parthmans    ^.^^  .^j£g  ^£  Robert  Fuller,  in  relation  to  Hopestill  Coney,  a  kinsman  of  sajd 
Coney.  Fullers,  whom  he  sould  at  Virginea,  the  Court,  on  a  hearing  of  what  he  could 

say,  judge  meete  to  respitt  the  chancering  of  the  sajd  Parthmans  bond  forfeit- 
ed till  the  County  Court  in  April  next,  &  orders  that  he  giue  sufficjent  security 
to  the  Tresurer  of  the  countiy  to  value  of  fiffty  pounds  on  this  condition,  that 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  429 

he  shall  bring  the  sajd  Hopestill  Coney,  whom  he  sold  at  Virginea,  to  Boston      1  G  6  0. 
sometjmcs  before  the  sajd  County  Court  in  Aprill  next,  if  he  be  aliue,  or  full  ■''       ' 

&  sufficjent  certifficat  of  his  death,  time  when  &  place  where  he  died,  on 
returne  whereof  the  County  Couit  is  hereby  impowred  to  proceede  to  chancery 
his  bonds  as  they  shall  see  cawse. 

In  ans'  to  y"  peticon  of  y*  company  in  partnership  in  the  iron  worke  at  Ans'to  compa- 

^  ,      ,        _,  ....  ,     .  1     •  Ti.      1      "V  petico  at 

Concord,  the  Coiu-t  judgeth  it  not  meete  to  graunt  theire  request,  i.  e.,  liberty  concord. 
to  digg  mine  in  any  mans  propriety  w*''out  theire  consent ;.  yett  being  willing 
to  encourage  the  petitioners  in  so  good  a  worke,  doe  graunt  them  free  liberty 
to  digg  mine  w"'out  molestation  in  any  lands  now  in  the  Courts  possession. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Frauncis  Johnson,  humbly  craving  the  graunt  Ans'  to  Fraun 

.  Til"  i-nr/-^i'i*^'^  Johnsons 

of  lands  for  money  layd  out  in  the  comon  stocke  by  his  vucle,  M"'  Christopher  petiCon  for 
Coultson,  the  Court  sees  not  reason  to  graunt  his  request,  in  regard  it  doth  land  o"  behalf 

'  °  of  Xtopher 

not  appeai-e  that  there  was  any  money  disbursed,  or  if  there  were,  yett  the  Coultson. 
petitioner  hath  no  order  to  receave  it. 

In  ans"^  to  the  petition  of  John  Mansfeild,  it  is  ordered,  y'  if  the  Ans'  to  Jn- 
petitioner  cann  proove  ought  to  be  due  to  him,  referring  to  his  mothers  estate,  peyjo^ 
he  shall  haue  his  liberty  in  a  due  course  of  lawe  to  recouer  it ;  and  for  ans"^  to 
that  pt  of  his  peticon  relating  to  w'  he  pretends  y^  late  Capt  Keayne  gaue 
him,  he  hath  had  so  many  ans'^  thereto  that  he  hath  nothing  given  to  him,  w"" 
w'"^  he  ought  to  rest  sattisfied ;  &  if  euer  he  trouble  y^  Court  w"^  such  ueede- 
lesse  &  frivolus  requests,  he  must  expect  some  sharpe  reproofs  from  the  Court, 
that  judgeth  it  not  convenjent  to  be  so  much  abused  by  him  as  to  spend  any 
more  pretious  time  thereabouts. 

*In  ans'  to   the   petition   of  Phillip  Chalice  &  Anthony  Coleby,  in  the      [*348.] 
behalf  of  the  inhabitants  of  y"  new  tounc  at  Salisbuiy,  to  w"*"  peticon  a  paper 
was  annext.     May  27,  1660. 

Whereas  certaine  articles  haue  binn  mutually  agreed  on  betwixt  the  old  Ans'taSaiis- 
tounc,  and  the  one  of  which  was  to  this  effect,  that  when  the  new  tounc  Ju^ps^^ti- 
were   at  chardg  to   mainetejne   one   to   perforine  y°  worke   of    the   ministry  *'""• 
amongst  them,  they  should    be    free   from   paying    to    the   ministry  of   the 
old  toune,  in  refference  to  which  article   the  brethren  that  liue  at  the  new 
tounc   haue   lately  signified  to   the   church  that  they  were  in  hand  with  Isly 
Subaell  Duiuer  for  this  end,  desiring  the  churches  advice  and   furtherance 
therein,  the    church    hcerevpon    doe  voate,  that  they  ap^hend    J!""  Duiuer 
maybe  a  man  suitable  for  that  worke  amongst  them  :  they  further  declare, 
that  if  fewer  brethren  secke  to  y"  honnored  Gcit  Court,  who  only  haue  power 
to  make  vs  distinct  tounes,  they  shall  not  at  all  hinder  them  in  theire  suite ; 
and  further,  if  the  honnored  Gennerall  Court  doe  free  them  from  vs,  they  shall 
not  only  submitt  thereto,  but  also  further,  what  Ijes  in  them,  theire  obteining 


430 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


31  May. 


1660.      of  M''  Dumer  or  any  other  meete  man.     This  is  a  true  copie  of  the  churches 
vote,  w*  was  cleerely  passed  in  the  afhrmatiue. 

p   me,  WILLJAM   WORCESTER. 

The  Court  judg  it  meet  to  concurre  w"'  M"'  Worcester  &  y®  church  in 
the  paper  hereto  affixed,  judging  that  the  person  in  nomination  for  the  helpe 
of  the  new  toune  may  be  a  man  meete  for  that  worke. 


Cap'  Gookin  to  Capt  Daniell  Gookin  is  appointed  to  joyne  w"'  Capt  Wiggins  to  keepo 

County  Courts.  Norfolke  County  Courts  for  this  yeere  ensuing. 

Ans'toW"  In  ans' to  the  jietition  of  Willjam  Hilton,  humbly  craving  this  Courts 

Con  allowanc  &  confirmation  of  a  deed  of  guift  of  six  miles  square  of  land  lying 

on  y"  Riuer  Pennieconaquigg,  being  a  riulet  running  into  the  Riuer  Penacooke, 
w""  two  miles  of  the  best  meadow  lying  on  the  north  east  side  of  Pennacook, 
giuen  to  his  father  &  him  in  y"  yeere  1636  by  Tahanto,  y^  sagamore  there  ;  & 
the  Court,  hauing  considered  y*  contents  of  this  petition,  judg  meete  not  to 
graunt  the  same,  but  considering  the  petitioners  grounds  for  the  approbation 
of  the  Indians  graunt,  doe  judge  meete  to  graunt  that  three  hundred  acres  of 
the  sajd  land  be  sett  out  to  the  petitioner  by  a  coiiiittee  chosen  by  this  Court, 
so  as  that  it  may  not  prejudice  any  plantation ;  and  this  as  a  finall  end  of  all 
future  clajmes  by  virtue  of  such  graunt  from  the  Indians. 

In  ans"'  to  the  peticon  of  M''  Joseph  Hills,  the  Court  judged  meete  to 
graunt,  that  IM""  Jonathan  Danforth  &  Jn"  or  James  Parker  be  impowred  to  lay 
out  vnto  M'  Hill  the  fine  hundred  acres  formerly,  in  1656,  graunted  him  in 
any  place  not  formerly  graunted. 


M'  Hills 
graunt. 


[*349.] 


To  all  people  to  whom  this  present  writing  shall  come  to  be  seene  or  read. 
Whereas  the  honnored  Gennerall  Court  of  the  Massachusetts  was  pleased  of 
theire  free  beneficence  &  bounty  to  graunt  vnto  the  Indians  of  Patucket  a 
parcell  of  land  adjoyning  to  the  bounds  of  Chelmsford  plantation,  the  scittu- 
ation  whereof  being  by  experience  found  to  be  prejudicial!  vnto  the  mutuall 
peace  of  the  sajd  plantations,  —  now,  this  wittnesseth  that  the  Indian  inhabitants 
of  the  abouesajd  plantation,  w"'  the  consent  and  approbation  of  the  Reuerend 
M''  John  Elliott,  Sen,  banc  couenanted  and  agreed  to  make  an  exchange  of 
land  w""  the  inhabitants  of  Chelmsford,  in  manner  following,  viz':  lat  the 
partition  &  dividing  Ijne  betweene  the  sajd  English  &  Indian  plantation 
shall  beginn  at  the  Great  Swampe,  the  sajd  swampe  being  left  w"'in  the 
bounds  of  C'hehnsford,  excepting  only  about  tenn  foote  in  breadth,  and  from 
thence  tlie  Ijuc  to  he  continued  by  the  marked  trees,  as  the  former  coiiiittee 
sett  out  the  same,  vntill   it   re:irl^.ctK   ^fcrremacke  Riuer;   and  all  the  *land 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  431 

lying  on  the  northeast  side  of  the  sajd  Ijne,  formerly  belonging   to  Chelms-      1  G  G  0. 
ford,  shall  henceforth  be  the  propper  right  &  to  the  sole  vse  of  the  sjjd  Indian  ''    ~^ 

plantation  ;  and  all  the  lands  on  the  southwest  side  of  the  sajd  Ijne,  excepting  _    .         . 
only  what  is  hereafter  graunted  vnto  James  Parker,  Avhither  of  the  Indians  '^nd  betwene 

y  Indians  & 

old  or  new  graiint,  &  euery  parte  thereof,  shall  foreuer  be  &  remajne  the  prop-  Chelmsford, 
per  right  &  to  the  sole  use  of  the  inhabitants  of  Chelmsford.  And  whereas 
there  is  a  parcell  of  land  lying  &  being  at  the  west  end  of  the  Indians  graunt, 
w""*  is  not  w"'in  the  bounds  (of  either  plantation)  as  aboue  exprest,  this  witt- 
nesseth  that  the  sajd  parcell  of  land,  be  it  more  or  lesse,  is,  by  the  free  con- 
sent of  both  the  abouesajd  plantations,  given,  graunted,  &  alienated  vnto  James 
Parker,  of  Chelmsford,  abouesajd,  for  and  in  consideration  of  his  great  pajnes 
and  costs  w"^*"  he  hath  necessarily  expended  in  setling  the  bounds,  as  aboue  is 
expressed,  betweene  the  abouesajd  plantations,  to  haue  &  to  hold  the  sajd 
parcell  of  land,  w"'all  the  appurtenances  thereof,  vnto  him,  the  sajd  James 
Parker,  his  heires  and  assignes  for  eiier,  to  his  and  theire  only  propper  vse  & 
behoofe.  And  to  the  true  performance  of  the  aboue  named  exchange  & 
graunt,  mutually  made  by  &  betweeue  the  sajd  plantations,  and  also  theire 
joinct  graunt  and  guift  vnto  the  sajd  James  Parker,  on  condicons  &  in  manner 
aboue  expressed,  both  the  sajd  plantations  doe  hereby  respectively  bind  them- 
selves, theire  heires,  execcuto"^^,  &  administrators,  each  to  other  &  joinctly,  to 
the  sajd  James  Parker,  his  heires  &  assignes,  firmely  by  these  presents  ;  in 
■wittnes  whereof  these  whose  names  are  subscribed  as  the  deputjes  &  lawfuU 
trustees  of  the  abouesajd  plantations,  haue  herevnto  putt  theire  hands  &  seales. 
Aprill  the  third,  1660. 

Signed  in  presence  of  JAMES  PARKER,  &  a  seale, 

WiUjam  Simmes,  WILLIAM  FELTHER, 

Samuell  Greene,  THO:   HINCKSMAN,  &  a  seale, 

James  Converse.  JOHN  ELLIOT,  in  wittness  of 

my  approbation. 

The  names  of  y"  cheife  inhabitants  of  Pinatucket,  testifying  theire  con- 
sent and  sattisfaction  in  this  deed  :  — 

The  marke  of   (^    PUNTAHHUN, 

JOHN  TOHATOWON. 
The  m'-ke,  $    KUSSINAUSCUT, 

The  marke  of  ©  PANNOBOTIQUIS, 
The  m'-ke  vJ^  of  NOMPHON, 
The  m'^ke  of  Q_  PETER, 
The  m'ke  of  O^^  NONNOIT, 
The  m^ke  of  A^oo  WOMPANNOOUN. 


THE  RECOKDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

Wee  doe  testify  these  markes  &  names  were  sett  doune  lawfully  at  a 
publicke  meeting,  the  14"^  of  the  3'',  16G0. 

JOHN  ELIOT,  Sen, 

JOHN  ELIOT,  Jun. 

This  deed  is  acknowledged  by  W™  Fletcher,  Tho  Hincksman,  together  w"> 
James  Parker,  as  trustees  for  y'  Indians,  to  be  theire  act  &  deed,  this  5 
2  m,  1660. 

As  attest,  THO:    DANFOETH. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Chelmsford  &  Patuckett,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  confirrae  theire  agreement,  &  orders  the  same  to  be 
recorded. 


[*350.]     *^tt   the   second   Sessions  of  the    Generall    Court,   held  at  Boston, 
16  October.  ^/jg  26'"  of  Octob%  1660. 

TheCourtmett  "TTT  beinof  a  matter  of  some  concernment  to  the  country  rightly  to  vnder- 
atytime.  I  ...  .  . 

When  the         -^    Stand  when  this  last  impression  of  the  lawes  are  to  be  in  force  and  beginn 

lawes  be  in  ^^  ^^^^^  place,  this  Court  doth  therefore  order  &  declare,  willing  &  requiring 
all  persons  concerned  to  take  notice,  that  the  sajd  impression  of  lawes  shall  be 
of  force  after  the  expiration  of  thirty  dajes  from  the  day  of  the  date  of  these 
presents,  and  that  in  the  meane  tjme  the  old  bookes  to  stand  good  &  to  be 
attended  to  as  before. 
Self-murderers  This  Court,  Considering  how  farre  Sathan  doth  prevajle  vpon  seuerall 

buriali.  persons  w^'in  this  jurisdiction  to  make  away  themselves,  judgeth  that  God 

calls  them  to  beare  testimony  against  such  wicked  and  vnnaturall  practises, 
that  others  may  be  deterred  therefrom,  doe  therefore  order,  that  from  hence- 
forth if  any  person,  inhabitant  or  strainger,  shall  at  any  time  be  found  by 
any  jury  to  lay  violent  hands  on  themselves,  or  be  wilfully  guilty  of  theire 
oune  deaths,  euery  such  person  shall  be  denjed  the  priviledge  of  being 
burjed  in  the  coiiion  burying  place  of  Christians,  but  shall  be  buried  in 
some  comon  highway  where  the  selectmen  of  the  toune  where  such  person 
did  inhabit  shall  appoint,  &  a  cart  loade  of  stones  layd  vpon  the  graiie,  as  a 
brand  of  infamy,  and  as  a  warning  to  others  to  be  ware  of  the  like  damnable 
practises. 

For  explication  of  the  lawe  or  lawes  referring  to  the  manner  of  triuU  of 
such  persons  as  are  found  in  this  jurisdiction  after  bannishment  on  pajne  of 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW  ENGLAND.  433 

death,  this  Court  cloth  judge  meete  to  declare,  that  when  any  person  or  per-      1  G  6  0. 
sons  bannished  on  pajne  of  death  shall,  after  the  expiration  of  theire  time    '       ^       ' 

«        .       .      .    T  1^  October. 

Ijmitted  for  departure,  be  found  within   the   Ijmitts  of  this  jurisdiccon,  all  Addition  to  y« 
magistrates,  coinissioners,  connstables,  &  other  officers  of  this  jurisdiccon,  doe  '*7^  ^°^  *"'''^ 

o  '  '  '  •"  of  Quakers 

vse  theire  best  endeavors  for  theire  apphending  and  conveying  to  safe  cus-  after  banish- 

tody ;  &  being  there  secured,  such  person  or  persons  shall,  at  the  next  Court 

of  Asistants,  w"'ither  in  ordinary  or  specially  called  according  to  direction  of 

the  lawe  for  calling  of  such  Courts,  have  a  legall  triall  by  a  jury  of  twelve 

men,  &  being  found  by  evidence  or  theire  oune  confession  to  be  the  person  or 

persons  formerly  sentenced  to  banishment  on  pajne  of  death,  shall  accordingly  Gov  or  Dept 

be  sentenced  to  death  &  executed,  by  warrant  from  the  Goflno''  or  Dep*  Gou-  ^a^^iitfor"* 

erno"",  directed  to  the  marshall  generall,  vnlesse  he  or  they  be  regularly  re-  executions, &a. 

prived  in  the  meane  time. 

There  being  some  woemen  Quakers  now  in  prison  Ijable  to  sentence  of  Order  ab'  Mar- 

1  1       1        1  •  ■       1  !•  S^''*  Smith  & 

bannishment,  whose  husbands  are  innocent  persons  in  that  respect,  so  larre  as  u„y  Traske. 
wee  know,  &  are  inhabitants  in  this  jurisdiction,  this  Court  doth  order,  that 
the  sajd  weomen,  named  Marg'''  Smith  &  Marj  Traske,  be  coiiiitted  to  the 
house  of  correction,  &  there  kept  to  constant  labour  &  meane  diet,  according 
to  the  order  of  the  sajd  house,  vntill  this  Court  release  them,  and  that  the 
sentence  of  bannishment  vpon  the  sajd  persons  be  suspended,  any  lawo  to  the 
contrary  notw^'standing,  vnlesse  theire  husbands  shall  choose  to  carry  them 
out  of  this  jurisdiction,  &  not  returne  w^'out  leaue  first  obtejned. 

*In  ans'  to  a  motion  of  the  Quakers  now  in  prison  that  they  may  haue     [*351.] 
theire  liberty  to  goe  for  England,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  declare,  that  Quakers  liber- 

_  ty  in  case. 

all  the  Quakers  now  in  prison  shall  forthwith  haue  theire  liberty  to  goe  for  Eng- 
land in  this  ship  now  bound  thither,  if  they  will,  and  for  such  as  will  not  goe 
for  England,  they  shall  haue  liberty  forthwith  to  depart  this  jurisdiction  w*in 
eight  dajes,  so  as  they  solemnly  engage,  vnder  theire  hands,  deliQred  by  them 
to  the  Gouernor  or  Dep'  Gou,  that  they  will  not  returne  into  this  jurisdiction 
w"'out  leave  from  the  councill  or  Gennerall  Court  first  by  them  obtained. 

Resolved  on  the  quaestion  that  by  the  words  of  the  lawe,  tit.  Ferrjes,  p.  31,  Ques'  rcsoWi 
new  booke,  freeing  magistrates  &  deputjes  from  paying  ferriage  ouer  all  flfenjes  '^     ™^^^' 
that  pay  no  rent  to  the  country,  is  not  intended  to  infringe  the  propriety  of 
any  person  in  any  ferry. 

Whereas  Joseph  Nicolson  &  Jane,  his  wife,  being  two  Quakers  bannished  Joseph  &  Jane 

.  .  ,  .     Nicolson  liber- 

this  jurisdiction  vpon  pajne  of  death,  &  returning  some  time  since  into  this  ty  to  passe  for 

jurisdiction,  were  called  before  the  Court,  where  mannifesting  theire  desier  to  England. 

goe  for  England,  the  Court  graunted  liberty  to  the  aforesajd  persons  for  three 

dajes  to  depart  this  jurisdiction,  cither  for  England  or  elswhere,  the  sajd  persons 

VOL.    IV. PART   I.  55 


434 


THE    KECORDS    OF    THE    COLONY    OF 


M'  Fletcher 
silenc''. 


Comittee  to 
agree  w'^  y« 
mint  m'. 


Springfeild 
County  Court 
powe'  ab*  a 
prison,  &c. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Longs  peticon. 


Order  ab*  price 
of  corne. 


accordingly  repayilng  to  the  ship  then  bovmd  for  England,  but,  by  reason 
of  its  fullnes  of  y"  ships  lading,  could  not  obteiue  theire  passage,  &  on  theire 
returne  tendering  themselves  to  the  GoQnor  to  be  secured  in  prison  vntill 
they  may  gett  passage  for  England,  another  ship  being  bound  for  England, 
the  vndertakers  whereof  being  willing  to  transport  the  sajd  persons,  the  Court 
graunts  the  sajd  persons  liberty  to  passe  for  England  by  the  next  oppertunity, 
and  in  the  interim  to  be  seciu'ed  in  prison,  any  lawe  to  the  contrary  notw""- 
standing. 

The  Court,  hauing  pervsed  the  severall  evidences  presented  to  this  Court 
refering  to  M''  Fletcher  &  the  toune  of  Wells,  doe  judge  meete  to  declare  to 
the  sajd  inhabitants  that  they  haue  not  only  liberty,  but  are  hereby  enjoyned,  to 
procure  some  godly  able  minister  to  be  helpfull  to  them,  and  that  the  sajd 
Fletcher  is  hereby  enjoyned  to  forbeare  any  more  to  preach  amongst  them. 

It  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Gookin  &  y^  Tresurer,  M'  Anthony  Stoddard,  & 
M'  W™  Parks  shall  be  a  coiiiittee  &  are  hereby  impowrcd  to  treate  w"'  the 
mint  master  for  alowing  such  an  annuall  sofne  as  may  be  agreed  vpon  as  a 
meete  honorarium  to  the  country  for  the  yearely  benefitt  they  receive  by  mint- 
ing, that  so  the  country  may  reape  some  bennefitt  after  so  long  a  forbearance, 
hauing  given  them  the  bennefit  thereof  for  the  tjme  past,  or  otherwise  to  de- 
clare that  this  Coui't  intends  to  agree  w""  some  other  meete  person  to  minte 
the  money  of  this  country,  making  theire  report  to  the  next  Court  what  they 
shall  doe  heerein. 

It  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  Springfeild  County  Court  be  &  is  heere- 
by  irapowred  to  erect  &  improove  a  prison  &  house  of  correction,  as  other 
countys  haue,  any  deficiency  for  want  of  magistrates  notw"'standing,  and  that 
the  coiiiissioners  for  that  Court,  or  any  two  of  them,  be  impowred  to  act  in 
any  case  concerning  the  same,  &  for  the  coiiiitting  of  offendors  thereto,  &  re- 
leasing of  them  againe,  as  any  one  magistrate  may  doe. 

In  ans''  to  the  peticon  of  Robert  Long,  of  Charls  Toune,  humbly  desir- 
ing the  favo''  of  this  Court  to  remitt  what  is  due  from  him  to  y''  country,  &  is 
yett  behind,  in  relation  to  impost,  &  that  he  may  be  freed  from  impost  for  y* 
future,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  remitt  vnto  the  peticoner  the  arreares 
due  to  y'  country,  not  exceeding  tenn  pounds. 

It  is  ordered  by  this  Court,  that  all  sorts  of  corne  shall  be  pajd  in  the 
country  rate,  for  y*  yeare  ensuing,  at  these  prizes  :  wheat  at  fiue  shillings  p 
bush,  barly  &  barly  mault  at  fower  shillings  sixe  penc,  pease  &  rye  at  fewer 
shillings,  &  Indjan  at  three  shillings  p  bush,  &  y'  all  sorts  of  goods,  except 
corne,  paid  in  to  the  country  rate,  shall  be  pajd  at  money  prize. 


[*S52.] 


*Wee,  whose  names  are  vnder  written,  being  appointed  by  the  General! 


16  October. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  435 

Court,  held  at  Boston,  18""  October,  1659,  for  to  heare  &  determine  certain  dif-  1  6  G  0. 
ferences  w'^''  concerne  Lef?  W"'  Phillips,  ^V  George  Clcaues,  M"'  John  Bomigh- 
ton,  &  M'  llichard  Foxwell,  and  to  make  returne  thereof  vnto  this  Court,  wee 
accordingly,  hauing  attended  that  service,  returne  as  followeth  :  That  the  toune 
of  Saco  shall  haue  belonging  vnto  it  all  the  lands  lying  w^'in  the  bounds  here- 
after mentioned,  viz'^,  from  Winter  Harbor  to  Saco  Riuer  mouth,  &  from 
thence  vp  along  the  sajd  riuer  toward  the  falls  as  farr  as  the  house  of  Am- 
brose Berry,  and  from  thence  a  Ijne  to  runne  on  a  square  towards  Cape 
Porpus  so  farre  as  the  bounds  of  the  sajd  toune  of  Saco  goeth  that  way,  and 
60  downe  the  dividing  Ijne  betwixt  Cape  Porpus  and  Saco  vnto  the  sea,  and 
so  along  the  sea  vnto  Winter  Harbor,  reserving  out  of  this  tract  the  seawall, 
beginning  at  a  pond  about  halfe  a  mile  southward  from  the  mill  coinonly 
called  Duck  Pond,  &  so  running  from  the  sajd  pond  to  the  mill,  &  from 
thence  to  the  necke  of  land  on  which  Roger  Spencer  liueth,  w"'  the  marshes 
adjoining,  to  the  seawall,  not  exceeding  forty  rods  broad  from  the  sajd  wall ; 
also  a  necke  of  land  coilionly  called  Parkers  Necke ;  also  fiffty  acres  of  wood  Courts  allow- 
land  adjoyning  to  an  alottment  late  in  the  possession  of  Goodman  Lajton,  be-  ^^^  comittees 
twlxt  M''  Hitchcocks  house  &  Saco  Riuer  mouth,  where  Left  Philhps  shall  "turne  relate 

to  Lef  PhU- 

make  chojce  of  it  in  any  land  not  in  lease,  which  aforesajd  tract  of  land  so  lips,  M' 
bounded  shall  be  disposed  of  by  the  tounsmen  of  Saco,  either  for  coiiions  or 
otheruise,  as  they  shall  see  cause,  vnto  w'^'^  disposall  of  the  aforesajd  tract 
Left  W™  Phillips  doth  consent ;  and  all  contracts  made  (by  any  of  the  possess- 
ors of  any  lands  w*''in  the  Ijmitts  of  the  pattent  in  Saco  w*  did  belong  vnto 
M''  Richard  Vjnes)  w*""  Left  Phillips  is  to  stand  good,  and  such  possessors  of 
lands  w'l'in  the  sajd  Ijmitts  as  haue  not  as  yett  contracted  for  these  lands  that 
they  doe  possesse,  are  to  pay  the  like  proportion  of  rent  W''  those  doe  who 
haue  already  contracted,  and  all  other  land  lying  w"'in  the  Ijmitts  of  the  be- 
fore mentioned  pattent  of  M"^  Vines  (excepting  that  necke  of  land  on  w*  Roger 
Spencer  dwells,  w'^  sajd  necke  is  bounded  w""  the  end  of  the  sea  wall  next 
to  it  adjoyning)  to  belong  vnto  Lef?  AV™  Phillips. 

In  relation  to  the  complainte  of  IM''  John  Bonighton,  we  finde  that  his 
pattent  is  in  joint  to  M''  Thomas  Lewes  and  the  father  of  Bonighton,  and  that 
seuerall  of  those  which  he  complaines  against  had  leave  from  the  aforesajd 
Lewes  or  his  successors.  We  therefore  order  that  a  due  divission  be  made 
betwixt  them,  if  it  be  not  already  donne,  and  then  those  that  trespasse  on. 
any  of  M""  Bonightons  rights  he  may  haue  his  remedy  in  a  course  of  lawe, 
■where  we  hope  he  may  haue  justice. 

And  as  for  the  complaint  of  M"^  George  Cleaue,  when  we  were  at  Saco, 
attending   the   Generall   Courts   before    mentioned    order,  his  writtings    and 


436 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 


1660. 


16  October. 


evidences  were  not  present :  therefore  wee  can  make  no  certajne  returne 
thereof,  but  judge  meete  the  tounesmcn  of  Fahnouth  be  ordered  not  to  dis- 
pose of  any  lands  w'^^  are  w^in  the  boundaryes  of  the  pattente  or  graunts  of 
the  sajd  M'  George  Cleaues  vntill  this  Com-t  take  further  order  therein.  As 
for  the  complaint  of  M"^  Eich  Foxwell,  he  appeared  not  there  for  to  make 
any  prooffe  thereof.     Dated  25  8  A,  1660,  &  signed 

P     HUMPHREY  ATHARTON, 
THOMAS  SAVAGE, 
THO:  CLARKE. 


The  Court  approoves  &  allowes  of  the  returne  of  these  comissioners,  and 
doe  order,  that  it  shall  be  a  finall  issue  of  all  matters  in  difference  betweene 
the  partjes  herein  menconed  and  the  matters  coutejned  therein. 


[•353.] 


*Whereas   it   appeares   to   this  Court,  by  seuerall  testimonjes  of  good 


M"  Hooke  ag' 
Jn"  Alcocke. 


Order  ab'  M'     repute,  that  M"^  Robert  Jordan  did  in  July  last,  after  excercise  was   ended 

Jordan. 

vpon  the  Lords  day,  in  the  house  of  M"  Mackworth,  in  the  toune  of  Fal- 
mouth, then  &  there  baptize  three  children  of  Nathaniell  Wales,  of  the  same 
toune,  to  the  offence  of  the  gouerument  of  this  coiuonwealth,  this  Court 
judgeth  it  necessary  to  beare  wittnes  ag*  such  irregular  practises,  doe  there- 
fore order  that  the  secretary,  by  letter,  in  the  name  of  this  Court,  require  him 
to  desist  from  any  such  practises  for  the  future,  and  also  that  he  appeare 
before  the  next  Generall  Court  to  ans''  what  shall  be  lajd  ag'  him  for  what  he 
hath  donne  for  the  tjme  past. 

In  the  case  now  depending  betweene  M"  Elino"^  Hooke,  relict  of  M'  W™ 
Hooke,  plaint,  for  hir  third  of  dower  in  a  house  &  a  certaine  parcell  of  land 
sold  by  hir  id  hixsband  vnto  M'^  John  Alcocke,  defendant,  coming  from  the 
non  agreement  of  y"  [Magistrates  in  y'  last  Court  of  Asistants  w"*  y'  jurjes 
virdict,  the  Court,  after  due  hearing  &  consideration  of  the  case,  concurring 
w*  the  virdict  of  the  jury,  finde  for  the  defendant  costs  of  Court,  fiffty  eight 
shillings  &  sixepence. 

In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Sampson  Shoare,  the  comittee  appointed  by  this 
Court  hauing  pervsed  &  giuen  both  partjes  full  liberty  to  make  theire  pleas 
in  the  case,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  order  that  the  petitioner,  Sampson 
Shoare,  doe  forthwith  giue  possession  of  the  house  w*''inmentioned  vnto  the 
w^in  named  Thomas  Dier,  according  to  the  judgment  of  the  Com-t  of  Asistants, 
and  that,  on  his  refusall,  the  marshall  doe  putt  the  sajd  Dier  into  legall  posses- 
sion thereof;  and  that  Capt  W""  Dauis,  M"'  Jn"  Wisewell,  &  M"^  Nathaniell  Will- 
jams,  or  any  two  of  them,  be  impowred  to  auditt  &  consider  of  the  damage 


Ans'  to  Samp- 
con  Shoars 
peticon. 


Y 

16  October 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  487 

that  the  sajd  Djer  hath  sustejned  for  non  pajmcnt  of  the  hundred  pounds  for  1  (50  0. 
■w"^  the  house  was  first  mortgaged,  as  also  all  other  accounts  yett  depending  be- 
tweene  the  sajd  Shoare  &  Djer,  and  what  shall  be  found  justly  due  to  the  sajd 
Djer,  the  same  to  be  pajd  and  sattisfied  out  of  the  sajd  house,  aswell  as  the 
bundled  pounds  for  w'^''  it  was  first  mortgaged ;  and  in  case  the  sajd  Shore 
shall  tender  the  pajment  of  the  sajd  hundred  pounds,  w""  what  els  shall  by 
the  sajd  audito''s  be  found  due,  to  the  sajd  Djer,  in  corne  &  catle,  by  apprise- 
ment  of  men  indifferently  chosen  at  any  time  w^'in  eight  months  after  the  date 
hereof,  the  sajd  Dier  shall  accept  thereof ;  or  otherwise,  on  refusall  of  such 
tender,  shall  alowe  vnto  the  sajd  Shoare  what  the  sajd  house  shall  be  apprised 
at  more,  by  men  indifferently  chosen,  then  such  his  just  debt  shall  amount 
vnto,  as  before  is  provided,  and  shall  deliuer  possession  of  the  sajd  house 
againe  to  the  sajd  Shoare,  his  hcires  or  assignes. 

Vpon   a   motion  made  in  the  behalfe  of  the  inhabitants  of  Salem,  this  Islands 
Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  to  them  certaine  islands  knowne  by  the  name  salem  on  con- 
of  the  Miserjes  &  Bakers  Island,  lying  in  the  mouth  of  theire  harbor ;  pro-  ^'^°°' 
vided,  that  it  shallbe  lawfuU  for  any  fishermen  to  make  vse  of  them  in  making 
of  fish,  &  whateuer  conduceth  thereto,  as  building  houses,  stages,  &d,  as  also 
wood  &  flaking  in  all  fishing  seasons. 

Graunted    to   Majo"'  Gen  Daniel  Dennison  sixe  hundred  acres  of  land.  Major  Deni- 
formlly  reserved   beyond    Merremacke   Riuer,    aboue  old  Willjams  planting  ggo  acs. 
ground,  in  lejw  of  so  much  long  since  graunted  him  w'''out  Rouley  bounds, 
provided  the  sajd  farme  be  not  w^'in  seven  miles  of  the  meeting  house  at 
Hauerill. 

*Lajd  out  to  Edward  Cowell,  of  Boston,  two  hundred  acres  of  land  in  the      [*354.] 
wildernesse  on  the  westerne  side  of  Merrimacke  Riuer,  beginning  at  the  head  ^^w.  Cowoiis 

farme  lajd  out. 

of  a  brooke  called  Salmon  Brooke,  bounded  at  the  head  w""  the  great  pond 
called  by  the  Indians  Mashepagocke,  so  running  doune  the  aforesajd  brooke 
towards  the  northeast,  lying  on  both  sides  that  brooke,  one  part  or  parcell  of 
the  same  conteining  one  hundred  &  fiffty  acres,  lyeth  on  the  northwest  side  of 
the  sajd  brooke,  being  bounded  w*  the  aforesajd  pond,  and  another  smale 
pond  on  the  west  &  northwest ;  &  on  the  north  it  is  bounded  w"'  Groaten 
path  at  the  brooke ;  and  one  part  or  parcell  of  the  same,  conteining  about 
fiffty  acres,  lyeth  on  the  southeast  of  the  sajd  brooke,  adjoyning  to  the  other, 
the  wildernes  elswhere  surrounding  according  to  marked  bound  trees,  as  is 
more  fully  demonstrated  by  a  plat  taken  of  the  same  by  Jonathan  Danforth, 
survejor. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approues  of  this  rctourne  of  y"  land  lajd  out. 

As  a  finall  issue  of  all   controdsies  rcferriiisf  to  the  Go{lno''s  farme  on 


438 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


1660. 

16  October. 
Courts  final 
resolution  re- 
lating to 
Gufln'  farme. 
M'  Endecotts 
farme. 


Roxbury  500 
acres. 

Courts  further 
graunt  to  M' 
Hauthorn, 
&c,  rela'  to  a 
new  plan'  ab' 
y»  Dutch. 


Ipswicli  Riuer,  this  Coiirt  doth  order,  that  the  bounds  thereof  shall  in  all 
points  be  continewed  according  to  the  platt  thereof  returnd  by  M''  Thomas 
Uanforth  &  Robert  Hale,  excepting  only  what  shall  be  found  to  be  conteined 
therein  more  then  the  five  hundred  &  fifFty  acres  ;  the  same  to  be  defaulcated 
at  the  angle  next  vnto  Zackeus  Golds  house ;  provided  alwajes,  the  brooke 
shall  coutinew  to  the  bounds  on  that  side  as  high  as  the  smale  Grindle  Swampe 
that  parteth  betweene  the  plajne  and  the  rocke,  and  runneth  into  the  sajd 
brooke  ;  and  M''  Thomas  Danforth,  Majo'^  Willjam  Hauthoi-ne,  &  Lef  ?  Joshua 
Fisher,  or  any  two  of  them,  are  impowred  accordingly  to  sett  out  the 
same. 

The  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  the  towne  of  Eoxbury  fine  hundred 
acres  of  land  towards  the  mainetenance  of  a  free  school. 

Whereas  this  Court,  in  October,  59,  did  graunt  a  certaine  tract  of  land 
vpon  Hudsons  Riuer,  aboue  the  Fort  Awrania,  to  Major  W™  Hauthorne,  Cap? 
Thomas  Sauage,  &6,  w"'  liberty  to  erect  a  plantacon  &  setle  a  trade  w'*"  the 
natiues,  as  may  appeare  by  seuerall  orders  of  the  Court  for  the  incouragment 
of  so  vsefull  a  worke,  liberty  &  power  is  hereby  graunted  to  the  sajd  gent" 
to  leade,  conduct,  or  transport  through  this  jurisdiction  any  convenient  noum- 
ber  of  men  as  they  may  or  shall  procure,  w""  all  necessary  provission  for  such 
an  vndertaking  ;  to  plant  &  possesse  the  sajd  land  &  setle  the  sajd  trade. 
And  if  the  sajd  planters  shall  in  tlieire  journey  as  aforesajd,  or  in  theire  plant- 
ing or  possessing  the  sajd  land,  be  opposed  or  assaulted  by  any  Indians  or 
others,  the  like  liberty  &  power  is  hereby  graunted  them  to  defend  themselves, 
estates,  &  possessions,  and  to  rej)ell  all  such  attempts  by  force  of  amies,  where- 
in they  may  expect  the  protection,  asistance,  &  support  of  this  goQnment,  as 
any  other  the  inhabitants  of  this  jurisdiction  may  or  should  in  like  cases  be 
protected. 

And  for  the  well  ordering  &  gouerning  of  the  sajd  plantation,  being  so 
remote,  it  is  hereby  ordered,  that  the  Goflno''  for  the  time  being  shall  giue 
coiiiission  to  some  meete  person  or  persons  to  act  in  the  sajd  plantation 
according  to  the  power  and  authority  of  a  magistrate,  or  according  to  the 
power  of  a  County  Court  of  this  jurisdiction,  till  this  Court  take  further 
order. 

And  if  any  of  the  grauntees  shall  neglect  to  asist  &  contribute  theire 
proportions  of  chardge  to  this  vndertaking,  such  person  shall  &  is  hereby 
debarred  fiom  challendging  any  interest  or  advantage  from  the  sajd  graunts  ; 
but  it  shallbc  laufull  for  the  rest  of  the  grauntees  or  vndertakers  to  take  in 
other  partners  &  carrj'  on  the  worke  ;  provided  alwajes,  that  the  sajd  grauntees 
or  vndertakers  doe,  w"'in  the  space  of  two  yeares  after  the  date  hereof,  erect 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  439 

a  house,  &  setle  at  least  tenn  men  vpou  the  sajd  lanil,  otherwise  all  graunts      1  (5  6  0. 
now  or  formerly  made  to  be  vojd  &  of  none  effect.  "       i       ' 

«T  1  •  ~^  c  /-^  ri  1        /-I  •IT-  ^^  October. 

'In  ans'  to  the  peticon  ot  ueorge  Carre,  the  Lourt  judgeth  it  meete  to      r»q;:c  i 
order,  that  M'  Carre  shall  be  rate  free  for  the  bridge  to  the  country  &  toiuie  ,      ^   ,, 

'  o  .7  Ans'  to  Georg 

rates  as  long  as  the  bridg  he  made  oQ  pt  of  Merremacke  Riuer  continews ;  and  Carrs  peticon. 
also  graunts  one  hundred  &  fiffty  acres   of  land  to  enjoy  during  the  bridg' 
standing  &  its  being  meinteined. 

The  Court  judgeth  it  necessary  that  letters  of  thankfulnes  be  sent  to  our  Letters  to  be 
honno''d  ffreinds  in  Engid  for  theire  great  respect  to  this  collony,  and  referr  ;^  gngi^ 
the  same  to  the  ouerseers  of  the  colledge,  to  be  sent  by  the  first  opportunity. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  M'  Nathaniell  Duncan,  the  Court,  considering  500  acs 
his  present  condition  &  former  service,  iudge  meete  to  graunt  him  fine  hun-  ^i^'™"'!  '° 

'  '  J       o  D  IS  nth.  Duncan. 

dred  acres  of  land.  Vide  p»  466. 

In  ans''  to  y'  petition  of  W"  Hudson  &  Evan  Thomas,  the  Court  judgeth  W"  Hudson 
it  meete,  in  regard  the  petitioners  haue  susteyned  prejudice  (by  the  law  en-  Thomas al- 
abling  merchants  to  sell  wine  not  less  then  three  gallons)  in  theire  implojment,  '""'"'• 
to  order  that  one  whole  yeares  rent,  viz.,  forty  jjounds,  be  allowed  to  W"" 
Hudson,  &  thirty  pounds  to  Evan  Thomas,  as  full  sattisfaction  of  all  theire 
damages. 

Vpon  the  motion  of  Left  W™  Hudson  &  Lef?  Robert  Turner  to  this  W""  Hudson 
Court,  craving  further  liberty  from  this  Court  for  drauing  of  wine,  the  Court  ners  ucens. 
judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  them  a  renewing  of  theire  licenses  for  the  space 
of  fine  full  yeeres  iiuediately  following  the  the,  expiration  of  theire  former 
licenses,  for  w'''"  they  are  to  pay  fiffty  pounds  p  anm,  Leif  t  Hudson  thirty  pounds, 
&  Lef  ?  Turner  twenty  pounds  p  aiim  to  y'^  Tresurer ;  provided  also,  that  on 
any  abuse  or  breach  of  lawes  they  shall  be  subject  to  the  County  Court  or  any 
magistrate,  according  to  lawe. 

In  ans''  to  the  request  of  Evan  Thomas,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  Evan  Thomas 

licence* 

renew  Evan  Thomas  his  licenc  also  for  one  yeare,  he  paying  twenty  pounds 
for  y"  same  to  the  Tresurer,  &  being  also  subject  to  tlie  censure  of  the  County 
Court  &  magistrate  as  the  other,  according  to  lawe. 

Whereas  this  Court  hath  heeretofore  allowed  the  vndertakers  of  the  iron-  Courts  gratuity 
workes  at  Lynne  the  suine  of  tenn  pounds  p  annu  towards  the  payment  of  jpj.„iig4, 
theire  country  rate,  w''''  this  Court  judges  not  meete  any  longer  to  allow,  the 
same  being  now  free  from  any  such  engagcint. 

This  Court,   being    much   neglected   for  want  of   necessary  officers  and  Jonathan 

•  riiiiiLi,      Negus  &  A- Ser- 

attendants,   doe   order,   that   two   sargants,   as   formerly,   sludl   be  chosen   by  ja„t  uichard 
the  Com-t  to  attend  this  Court  in  the  time  of  theire  sitting,  and  the  GoQnor  Wajte,  attend" 

^  on  y»  Courts  & 

as  a  guard  at  all  publicke  meetings  out  of  Court,  for  w"''  theire  service  they  Gou. 


440 


THE  EECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 


Keeper,  order 
for  his  fFees, 
&C,  ab' 
Quakers. 

[*356.] 

Ans'  to  M' 
Woodmaiis 
peticon. 


Ans'  to  M' 
Jefferys  petic. 


Ans'  to  Salis- 
bury petiSon 
for  a  tract  of 
land. 


Order  ab'  en- 
quiry of 
pouder,  &c. 


M' Dumers  sale 
of  Rouley  mill 
confirmdj  &c. 


Ans'  to  Col. 
Crounes  peti- 
con. 


are  to  be  pajd  twenty  pounds  p  annu  out  of  the  publicke  tresury,  and  the 
GoQno'',  Deputy  GoQuo'',  and  secretary,  or  any  two  of  them,  are  appomted  to 
nominate  some  fitt  &  honest  persons  for  this  service,  to  be  approoved  of  by 
the  Court  before  theire  rising.  Sarjant  Richard  Wajte  and  Jonathan  Negus, 
being  presented  by  the  GoQno''  &  secretaiy  as  meete  persons  for  that  service, 
was  by  the  whole  Court  allowed  of. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Tresurer  sattisfy  the  keeper  for  the  fees  due  to  him 
for  the  Quakers  for  the  time  past,  and  for  the  tjme  to  come  the  Court  will 
consider  of  some  such  way  as  the  keeper  shall  not  be  discouraged. 

*In  ans''  to  y'  petition  of  M"^  Edward  Woodman,  humbly  desiring  the  fa- 
vour of  this  Court  in  graunting  him  a  parcell  of  land  lying  betweene  Rouley 
&  Newbury  lynes,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete  to  graunt  him  three  hundred 
acres  there. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  M'^  W™  Jefferys,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete 
to  graunt  him  fiue  hundred  acres  of  land,  to  be  lajd  out  in  such  place  as  he 
shall  find  it,  on  the  south  side  of  our  pattent,  &  that  to  be  a  finall  issue  of  all 
clajmes  by  virtue  of  any  graunt  heretofore  made  by  any  Indian  whatsoeuer. 

In  ans""  to  the  petition  of  the  inhabitants  of  Salisbury,  humbly  craving  a 
tract  of,  land  lying  betweene  theire  bounds  &  the  bounds  of  Hampton,  it  is 
ordered,  that  M''  Edward  Woodman,  Lef  ?  Robt  Pike,  &  Lef?  Hussie  be  a 
coiiilttee  to  vejw  the  land  &  to  make  returne,  both  of  quantitje  and  quallitje 
thereof,  to  the  next  Gennerall  Court,  when  it  may  be  further  considered  of. 

Whereas  this  Court  hath  heretofore  by  seuerall  orders  enjoynd  that  each 
toune  w"'in  this  jurisdiction  should  be  provided  w"*  a  stocke  of  pouder  & 
other  amnition,  as  in  the  sajd  orders  doth  appeare,  a  returne  whereof  was  to 
be  made  to  the  survejo''  gen",  &  accordingly  some  townes  made  retiu'nes, 
others  did  not,  —  in  further  prosecution  of  the  sajd  order,  this  Court  doth 
heereby  order  &  enjoyne,  that  the  deputy  or  deputjes  of  each  towne  w"'in  this 
jurisdiction  shall  make  dilligent  enquiry  w"'in  theire  townes  what  pouder  & 
other  amnition  they  haue,  &  make  returne  of  the  same,  vnder  theire  hands, 
to  the  next  Court  of  Election,  or  to  the  present  survejors  gen",  or  any  one  of 
them,  and  in  all  such  townes  where  no  deputjes  are,  that  there  the  selectmen 
or  connstable  shall  &  hereby  are  enjoyned  to  make  the  like  returnes. 

In  the  case  now  depending  betweene  John  Peirson,  of  Rouley,  &  M' 
Richard  Dummer,  referring  to  the  sale  of  a  mill  &  certaine  lands,  some  tjmes 
possessed  by  M'  Nelson,  of  Rouley,  deceased,  &  now  sold  by  the  sajd  M' 
Dummer  to  y*  id  Peirson  for  the  vse  of  the  sajd  M'  Nelsons  children,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  meet  to  confirme  the  sale  of  the  sajd  mill  &  land. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  Colonell  W""  Croune,  the  Court  declares,  that  the 


IG  Octoljor. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  44 1 

petitioner  may  bring  his  action  ag'  the  connstablc  for  neglect  of  his  duty,  or      1  G  G  0. 
he  might  haiie  sent  the  marshall  genii  to  haue  served  the  attachment  on  y" 
estate  of  ^I"'  Jordan,  if  he  had  seeue  meete. 

Whereas,  at  the  request  of  this  Court,  M"^  Thomas  Danforth  hath  attended  2-3;)  acs  land 

di*     ^  '     /-,  '  '11  1  o  1  •  grauutcd  to  M' 

ic  service  ot  tins  Court  ni  surveying  the  lawes  at  tlic  presse,  ix  making  an  u^„f„rth. 

index  thereto,  this  Court   judgeth    meete,  as    a   gratuity  for  his   pajues,  to 

graunt  him  two  hundred  &  fiffty  acres  of  laud,  to  be  lajd  out  in  any  place  not 

legally  disposed  of  by  this  Court. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  the  Tresurer  sattisfy  &  pay  Left  Rotjt  Turner  sixe  GoUnor  ex- 

1  1  •IT  „  1     1  1        1      /-<  ■        1         •  /•  pcnccs  to  be 

pounds  tenne  shillings  &  tenn  pence,  expended  by  the  Crouerno'^  111  tlie  tune  01  pd^  j^g. 
his    late    sicknes,  -when  he  was  on  the  countrjs  service  on  coiiiission  for  y" 
United  Colonjes.     58. 

Itt  is  ordered,  that  Capt  Thomas  jNIarshall  shall  &  is  hereby  impowred  Cap>  Marshall 

coin  to  marry 

to  solemnize  marriage  betweene  James  Richardson  &  Bridget  Hiucksman,  of  j,  tempore. 
Chelmsford,  being  published  according  to  lavi'e. 

In  ans''  to  the  petition  of  Cap?  George  Dennison,  humbly  desiring  a  350  acs  to 
graunt  of  lands  in  the  Pecquod  Country,  the  Court  judgeth  it  meete,  hauing  uenison.  ° 
implojecl  him  in  seii"  services  for  the  country,  to  graunt  him  two  hundred  & 
iiifty  acres  of  land  where  it  is  to  be  found. 

In  answer  to  the  peticou  of  M'  Anthony  Stoddard,  the  Court,  hauing  pe-  5no  acres  to 
rvsed  &  considered  y*^  grounds  of  y"  peticon,  as  also  the  readiues  of  y'  pe-      children  of 
ticbner  at  all  times  to  be  serviceable  for  the  good  of  the  country,  judgeth  ^^P'  ^e^s. 
meet  to  graunt  five  hundred  acres  of  land  to  be  {equally  divided   bctAveene  y* 
petition"'  &  Capt  Welds  children. 

*Lajd  out  tlii'ee  hundred  acres  of  land,  in  obedience  vnto  an  order  of  the      [*357.] 
Generall  Court,  dated  the  19">  of  the  third  iri,  1658,   for  IM--  W""  Colebron,  M'Coiebrons 

300  aC  lajd  out. 

of  Boston,  lying  in  the  wildernesse  bejond  Meadfeild,  adjoining  vnto  the  east 
side  of  Nicholas  Woods  farme,  and  being  from  E  to  A  about  one  hundred 
eighty  eight  rod,  and  from  A  to  B  about  two  hundred  &  thirty  rod ;  from  B 
to  C  about  two  hundred  &  sixty  rod  ;  from  C  to  D  two  hundred  &  tenn  rods ; 
&  from  D  againe  ynto  E  about  one  hundred  sixty  five  rods,  as  is  more  per- 
ticcularly  &  fully  marked  &  bounded  in  a  plot  di-aune  in  parchment  by  Joshua 
I'lsher. 

The  Com-t,  being  sattisfied,  by  Left  Fishers  testimony,  that  this  land 
was  lajd  out  before  Naticke  bounds,  judg  meete  to  allow  &  confirme  the 
same. 

Whereas  M'  Edward  Eawson  was  implojed  by  this  Court  for  the  di-auing  250  acers  to 
vp  of  the  booke  of  laues  before  it  was  performed  by  Majo"^  Geiill  Dennison, 

VOL.  IV.  —  r.vKT  I.  56 


16  October. 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

this  Court,  being  willing  to  acknouledg  the  labo''s  of  such  as  are  implojed  for 
y"  publicke  behooffe,  doe  judge  meete,  as  a  gratuity  for  his  pajnes,  to  graunt  him 
two  hundred  &  fifFty  acres  of  land  i)\  any  place  not  yett  disposed  of  by  this 
Court. 

M' Tings  250  Lajd  out  to  M"'  Edward  Ting,  of  Boston,  two  hundred  &  fifFty  acres  of 

aj   ou  .     j^^j^  j^  ^-^^  wildernesse   on   the  northern   side  of  Merremack  E.iuer,  being 

butted  &  bounded  by  a  farme  formerly  lajd  out  to  M"'  Russell,  Tresurer,  on 

the   south  east,  the  wildernes    elswhere    surrounding,  according   to  marked 

trees,  as  is  more  fully  demonstrated  by  a  plott  taken  of  the  same. 

By  JONATHAN  DANFORTH,  Survejor. 
The  Court  approoves  of  this  returne. 

M'  Whitings  Lajd  out  to  M"^  John  Whiting  four  hundred  acres  of  land  on  the  western 

40  ac'3  aj        ^. j^  ^£  ]\^gjremacke  River,  beginning  at  the  mouth  of  Salmon  Brooke,  &  so 

out.  '  o  o 

extending  vpwards  one  the  same  brooke  about  one  mile  &  halfe,  being  butted 
&  bounded  by  Merremacke  Riuer  on  the  east,  &  by  the  vpland  side  on  the 
north  of  the  sajd  brooke,  elswhere  bounded  by  marked  trees,  according  to  a 
platt  taken  of  the  same. 

The  Court  doth  approove  &  confirme  this  returne. 

M' Wilsons  Lajd  out  to  M"^  John  Wilson,  Sen,  of  Boston,  one  thousand  acres  of  land, 

more  or  lesse,  in  the  wilderness,  on  the  west  of  Merremacke  Riuer,  one  part 
or  parcell  of  the  same,  conteining  seven  hundred  acres,  more  or  lesse,  Ijeth 
vpon  Sowheaganock  Riuer,  at  a  place  called  by  the  Indians  Quohquima- 
paskessa-nahnoy,  w"^*^  is  about  fine  miles  by  estimation  from  Merremacke 
Riuer,  lying  three  hundred  sixty  fower  pole  in  length  vpon  Sowheaganuck 
Riuer,  fower  hundred  acres,  more  or  lesse,  on  the  north  side  of  the  riuer,  and 
three  hundred  acres,  more  or  lesse,  on  the  south  side,  being  butteld  and 
bounded  on  the  west  w"'  land  lately  lajd  out  for  Capt  W™  Dauis  &  Capt  Isack 
Johnson,  of  Roxbury,  the  wilderness  elswhere  surrounding,  according  to 
bounded  trees,  marked  w"*  L ;  also,  one  part  or  parcell  more,  conteining  three 
hundred  acres,  more  or  lesse,  Ijeth  about  one  mile  &  halfe  by  estimation 
southward  of  the  former  farme  vpon  the  head  of  Penichuck  Brooke,  being 
bounded  by  a  great  pond  on  the  south  west,  called  Pennichuck  Pond,  extending 
downe  the  brooke  about  two  hundred  &  eighty  pole  in  length,  lying  almost 
wholly  ou  the   northwest  side  of  the  sajd  brooke,  the  wilderness  elswhere 


out. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW   ENGLAND.  443 

surrounding,  according  vnto  bounded  trees,  w^"^  are  mai-ked  w'^  L,  all  which      1  G  6  0. 
is  more  fully  demonstrated  by  a  platt  taken  of  the  same.  ^^  ^^^^^^^ 

By  JONATHAN  DANFORTH,  Survejo'. 

The  Com-t  allowes  &  approoves  of  the  land  so  lajd  out  in  this  returne. 

*Lajd  out  to  Capl  W"  Dauis,  of  Boston,  and  to  Cap^  Isacke  Johnson,  of  [*358.] 
Roxbury,  to  each  of  them  two  hundred  &  fifty  acres  of  land,  more  or  lesse,  ^^^^^^'' 
w-''  Ijeth  together  in  one  platt  in  the  wildernesse  on  the  west  of  Merremack 
Riuer,  and  about  sixe  miles  by  estimation  from  Merremacke,  at  a  place  called 
by  the  Indians  Quohquinnapasskessanahnoy,  vpon  and  on  both  sides  Sowhea- 
ganock  Riuer,  lying  two  hundred  &  forty  pole  in  length  vpon  a  strelght  Ijne 
doune  the  riuer,  and  extends  about  halfe  a  mile  on  each  side  the  riuer,  being 
butteld  and  bounded  on  the  west  w"'  land  lately  lajd  out  for  M"  Anna  Lane, 
and  on  the  east  w"'  a  farme  lajd  out  for  M"-  John  Wilson,  Sen,  the  wilderness 
elswhere  surrounding,  according  vnto  the  bound  marked  trees,  w''"  are 
sufficjently  marked  w*"  P,  all  which  doth  more  fully  appeare  by  a  platt  taken 

By  JONATHAN  DANFORTH,  Survejor. 
The  Court  doth  allow  &  approove  of  this  returne. 
Laid  out  to  M'^  Anna  Cole  fine  hundred  acres,  more  or  Icsse,  of  land  in  M"  Anna 

•"  c       1  1        Coles  500  acres 

the  wildernes,  on  the  westerns  side  of  Merremacke  Riuer,  at  Sowheaganucke,  j,  ^^^ 
being  butteld  &  bounded  w'''  land  lately  lajd  out  for  Charlstowne  schoole  on 
the  west,  Sowheaganucke  Riuer  on  the  north,  lying  three  hundred  and  forty 
pole  long  by  the  side  of  the  sajd  riuer,  th  wildernesse  elswhere  surrounding, 
according  to  bound  mark  trees,  w*  are  marked  w"'  C,  w*  is  more  fully 
demonstrated  by  a  platt  taken  of  the  same. 

By  JONATHAN  DANFORTH,  Surveyor 

The  Coui-t  judgeth  it  meete  to  allowe  &  confirme  the  land  returned  to 
the  sajd  Anna  Cole,  lately  Keayne,  hir  hcircs  &  assignes  foreuer. 

In  ans-^  to  the  petition  of  Jn"  Shepheard,  y'  lately  lost  his  right  arme,  the  Jn«  Shep'ds 

'^  .300  ac's. 

Coiu-t  judgeth  it  meet  to  graunte  him  three  hundred  acres  of  land. 

A  tract  of  land  retimied  in  a  map  as  lajd  out  by  Joshua  Fisher  to  M-^  M'Lynes 

^  farrae  260  ac's 

Symond  Lynd  according  to  y"  Courts  graunt,  conteignmg  in  vplancl  tVc  twenty  ^,  „„t. 
acres  of  course  meadow  two  hundred  &  sixty  acres,  bounded  by  seuerall  Ijnes 
w*  the  letter  L  on  marked  trees  by.M"-  Bradstreets  farme  line,  &  the  farme 


444 
1G60. 

IS  October. 


THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

Ijne  of  M'  Winthrop,  Xaticke  bounds  lyne,  &  elswhere  w""  rocky  &  wast 
land,  as  in  y"  sajd  mapp  is  sett  forth,  w'"''  returne  the  Court  allowes  & 
approoves  of. 


8  mo.,  1660. 
Ch:\rls  Touns 
land  1000  ac's. 


8  mo.,  1660. 


By  virtue  of  an  order  of  the  Gennerall  Court,  lajd  out,  for  the  vse  of  the 

sclioole  of  Charles  Toune,  one  thousand  aci'es  of  land,  more  or  lesse,  in  the 

wildernesse,  on  the  westernc  side  of  Merrcmacke  Riuer,  at  a  place  comonly 

called  by  the  Indians  Sowheaganucke,  beginning  at  the  ffoote  of  a  great  hill, 

and  so  extending  eastward  about  two  miles  doune  the  sajd  riuer,  and  bounded 

w"'  the  riuer  north,  and  by  laud  lajd  out  for  M^  Anna  Cole  on  the  cast,  the 

wildernes    elswhere    surrounding,   according    to    marked    trees,   all   w''''    are 

sufficjently  bounded  w""  C,  and  is  more  fully  demonstrated  by  a  platt  taken  of 

the  same. 

Ey  JONATHAN  DANFORTH,  Sur^^ 


M'  J"  Ende- 
cott,  Jun.,  his 
farme  of  100 
ac's. 


The  Court  doth  allow  &  approovc  of  this  returne. 

Lajd  out  y-a.\.o  M'  John  Endccott,  Juii,  fower  hundred  acres  of  land,  more 

or  lessc,  in  the  wildernesse  on  the  east  side  of  Merremacke  Riuer,  about  six 

miles  northward  from  Patuckitt  Falls,  and  w^'in  one  mile  of  Beavor  Brook,  at 

a  great  hill  called  by  the  Indians  Masheshattuck,  lying  on  the  west  of  the 

forementioned  brooke,  and,  as  it  were,  betweene  two  great  hills,  and  neare 

adjoyning  to  a  pond  on  the  southwest,  called  by  the  Indians  Pemmemitte- 

quonnitt,  and  is  surrounded  by  wildernes  land,  being  sufficiently  bounded  by 

trees  marked  w""  E,  and  is  more  fully  demonstrated  by  a  platt  taken  of  the 

same. 

B^  JONATHAN  DANFORTH,  Survejor. 

The  Court  allowes  &  approoves  of  y*  returne. 


[*359.] 


*In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  the  toune  of  Boston,  the  Court  judgeth  it 


1000  acres        mecte  to  graunt  y'  sd  toune  of  Boston  one  thousand  acres  of  land,  for  their 

granted  to 

iBoston  free       furtheranc  &  helpe  to  dischardg  y*  chardg  of  a  free  schoole  there. 

schoole. 


M"  Lanes 
farme  .300  ac's. 


Lajde  out  to  31"^  Anna  Lane  fine  hundred  acres  of  land,  more  or  lesse,  in 
the  wildernesse,  on  the  west  of  ^Merremacke  Riuer,  and  about  seuen  miles  by 
estimation  from  Merremacke,  at  a  place  called  by  the  Indians  Quoquinna- 
passkessanahnoy,  which  is  vpon  Sowheaganocke  Riuer,  lying  two  hundred  & 
eighty  pole  in  length  vpon  the  riuer,  about  two  hundred  acres  lyeth  on  the 
north  side,  and  three  hundred  acres  on  the  south  side,  being  bounded  w""  land 


THE    MASSACIIUSETTo    BAY    IN    NEAV    ENGLAND.  445 

lajd  out  for  M'  Dauis  aud  Capt  Isacke  Johnson  on  the  east,  wilderness  land      1  G  ()  0. 
elswhere  surrounding  the  same,  as  by  a  plott  taken  of  the  same  is  more  fully  '—^ 


IG  Oitobor. 


demonstrated.  ^^  JONATHAN  DANFORTII,  Surveyo--. 

The  Corut  doth  approove,  allow,  &  confirme  this  returnc. 

In  ans'  to  the  peticon  of  the  inhabitants  of  Eraintry,  i.  e.,  Gregory  Bel-  Ans^lB-mhy 
char,  James   Penneman,  Tho   Mekins,  Moses   Fajne,   Edm"  Quinsey,  Eob'-t  „ewphntation. 
Twelves,  &  Peter  Brackctt,  the  Court  judgeth  it  mcete  to  encourage  the  pe-  ;[™;^^ 
titioncrs  to  proceede  in  theire  setling  themselves,  &  an  able  minister  w*>^  them, 
in  the  place  desired  for  a  new  plantation,  w"'in  theire  time  Ijmitted;  and  that 
those  that  beginnc  the  sajd  plantation  may  not  want  due  encouragement  in 
theire  accomodation,  &  yett  the  place  preserved  from  vnnccessary  wast,  it  is 
ordered,  that  Cap?  DanI  Gookin,  M^  W™  I'arkes,  Left  Roger  Clap,  Ephraim 
Child,  &  W-  Stiltson,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  be  &  hereby  are  appointed  a 
comittce,  &  hereby  impowred  to  appoint  vnto  each  inhabitant  there,  any  time 
w'"in  this  three  yeercs,  as  they  shall  sec   mcete,  &  that  when   a   full   num- 
ber of  persons  appearc,  this  Court  will,  on  the  comittccs  information,  order 
them  due  bounds.     In  further  ans'^  to  sajd  Eraintry  pctic^on,  the  Court  de- 
clares, that  they  judg  meetc  to  graunt  a  plantacon  of  eight  miles    square,  aud 
that  the  persons  named  haue  liberty  to  enter  there  vpon,  &  make  a  beginning 
thereof,  and  to  take  such  persons  into  theire  society  as  they  shall  judge  mcete, 
&  that  J^Iajor  Humphrey  Atherton,  Left  Roger  Clap,  Capt  Eliazer  Lusher,  & 
Deacon  Parkes,  or  any  three  of  them,  shall  &  hereby  are  appointed  comis- 
sion",  &  impowred  to  make  a  valid  act  there. 

The  Court,  hauing  receaued  &  pervsed  the  letter  sent  by  the  Dutch 
goiinoS  the  whole  Court  voted  theire  allowauc  of  a  letter,  w^"  was  by  them  also 
voted  &  ordered  to  be  iairely  written  out  by  ^  secretary,  &  pervsed  by  the 
GoQno%  Dep'  GoQno%  Capt  Gookin,  y"  secretary,  &  the  deputjes  of  Eoston,  for 
the  adding  or  altering  of  any  words  that  maybe  for  the  best  manner  of  expres- 
sion, or  any  three  of  them,  &  that  the  letter  be  signed  by  the  Goflno'  &  secrel 

To  all  Christian  people  to  whom  these  presents  shall  come.  Hannah 
Munings,  the  relict  &  administratrix  to  the  estate  of  the  late  Mahalaleell 
Munings,  formerly  of  Dorchester,  lately  of  Eoston,  in  New  England,  mer- 
chant, &  John  Wisewall,  hir  fother,  of  Eoston,  merchant,  administrators  to 
the  estate  of  the  sajd  ^lahalaleell  ^Innings,  sends  greeting:  Wherein  the  sajd 
Mahalaleell  Munings,  in  his  life  time,  in  consideration  of  the  some  of  fiffty 
pounds    to   him    in   hand  payd,  in  and  about   September,  sixteene  hundred 


16  October. 


446  THE  RECORDS  OP  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  G  G  0.  fiuety  &  eight,  by  Left  Roger  Clap,  of  Dorchester,  in  New  Engkncl,  afore- 
sajd,  did  make  a  bargaine  &  sale  of  a  dwelling  house,  scittuate,  lying,  &  being 
in  Dorchester,  aforesajd,  w"^  an  orchard  therevnto  belonging,  conteinino'  halfe 
an  acre,  more  or  lesse,  and  is  bounded  w'''  an  orchyard  &  laud  lately  be- 
longing to  the  sajd  Munings,  on  the  north  and  west,  w*''  the  high  wajes  on 
the  south  and  east,  w"'  fine  acres  of  land  more  on  the  necke,  bee  it  more  or 
[*360.]  lesse,  which  sajd  Munings  lately  purchast  *of  James  Bates,  and  is  bounded 
w*''  a  highway  on  the  north,  the  land  of  Willjam  Sommer  on  the  east,  the  land 
now  in  possession  of  Edward  &  Nicholas  Clap,  formerly  the  land  of  John 
Clap,  on  the  west,  and  the  sea  on  the  south,  w"'  two  acres  of  meadow  Ivino' 
neere  the  tide  mill,  be  it  more  or  lesse,  &  is  bounded  by  a  creeke  on  the 
north  &  north  west,  &  on  the  east  &  south  by  thejands  of  the  sajd  Eoger  Clap, 
as  also  three  smale  lotts  in  the  three  first  divisions  coinonly  called  the  Cow- 
walke,  each  lott  conteyning  one  acre  and  a  halfe  and  thirty  ninne  rods,  the 
first  of  the  three  smale  lotts  being  the  fowerteenth  lott,  the  second  smale 
lott  in  the  second  divission  being  the  foitjeth,  the  third  smale  lott  in  the  third 
divission  being  the  one  &  twentieth,  w""  all  libertjes,  priviledges,  &  appur- 
tenances to  the  same  belonging  or  in  any  wise  appertaining.  Now,  knowe  all 
men  by  these  presents,  that  wee,  the  abouc  mentioned  Hannah  Munings  & 
John  Wiswall,  administratrix  &  administrator  to  the  estate  of  the  sajd 
Mahalaleell  Munings,  being  fully  sattisficd  of  the  payment  of  the  sajd  fifty 
pounds  by  the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  as  also  of  the  sajd  Mimings  acceptance  there- 
of &  sattisfaction,  doe,  in  the  name  &  on  the  behalfe  of  y"  sajd  Mahalaleell 
Munings,  for  the  full  accomplishment  of  the  sajd  Munings  bargaine  &  sale  of 
all  the  aboue  mentioned  &  bounded  premisses,  he  dying  before  he  perfected 
the  same,  bane  absolutely  giuen,  grauntcd,  bargained,  sold,  aljened,  en- 
feoffed, &  confirmed,  &  by  these  ^sents  doe  absolutely  giue,  graunt,  bargaine, 
sell,  aliene,  enfeoffe,  &  confirme  vnto  the  aboue  mentioned  Roger  Clap,  &  his 
heires  &  assignes,  all  the  aboue  mentioned  dwelling  house,  orchard,  fine  acres 
of  land,  two  acres  of  meadow,  &  three  smale  lotts,  be  they  more  or  lesse,  but- 
Lef>  Claps  deed  telled  &  bounded  as  aboue  is  exprest,  to  him,  the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires 

from  adminis-      n  •  th     ii    r>       ii  c  ti         ■  •■it 

trator  &  ad-  ^  assignes,  w""  all  &  all  manner  oi  libertjes,  priviledges,  &  appurtenances  to 
™"^  °^*^^'^''"  the  same  belonging  or  in  anywise  appertaining,  and  to  his  and  theire  only  prop- 
estate,  per  vse  &  behooffe  foreuer.  And  the  sajd  Hannah  Munings  &  John  Wis- 
wall, administratrix  &  administrator,  as  aforesajd,  doth  for  themselves,  heires, 
execcutors,  administrators,  &  assignes,  couenant,  promise,  &  graunt  to  &  with 
the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires  &  assignes,  by  these  p>sents,  that  all  the  aboue 
grauntcd  premisses  shall  be,  &  contiuew  to  be,  the  propper  right  &  inherit- 
ance of  the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires  &  assignes,  foreuer,  w"'out  any  the 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  447 

lett,  molestation,  or  expulsion  of  them,  the  sajd  Hanna  Munings  or  John  Wise-      1  G  6  0. 
wall,  their  lieires  or  assignes,  or  by  or  from  any  of  the  helres  or  assigncs  of  ' 

the  sajd  Iklahalaleel  Munings,  or  any  clayming  any  title,  clajme,  or  interest  to 
the  same  or  any  part  thereof,  from  or  vnder  them,  or  any  of  them.  And  for 
further  warranty  of  the  aboue  graunted  ^misses,  that  the  sajd  premisses  now 
be,  &  all  time  &  times  hereafter  shall  be,  remajne,  continew,  &  abide  vnto 
the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires  &  assignes,  freely  &  cleerely  acquitted,  exon- 
norated,  &  dischardged,  or  otherwise,  from  tjme  to  tjme,  &  at  all  tjnies,  well  & 
sufEcjently  saued,  &  kept  harmeless  of  &  from  all  &  all  manner  of  former  &  other 
bargaines,  sales,  guifts,  graunts,  leases,  mortgages,  joinctures,  wills,  entailes, 
dowers,  or  other  incombrances  whatsoeuer,  had,  made,  donne,  acknowledged, 
comitted,  or  suffered  to  be  donne  by  them,  the  said  Hannah  Muning  &  John 
"VVisewall,  theire  heires  or  assignes,  or  by,  from,  or  vnder  the  sajd  Mahalaleel 
Munings,  his  heires  or  assignes,  clayming  any  right,  title,  or  interest  thereto, 
or  any  part  thereof,  whereby  the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires  or  assignes, 
shall  or  may  any  wayes  be  molested  or  lawfully  evicted  out  of  the  possession 
or  *enjoyment  thereof,  or  any  part  or  parcell  thereof.  And  the  sajd  Hannah  [*361.  | 
Munings  &  John  Wisewall,  administratrix  &  administrator,  as  aforesajd,  doth 
couenant,  promise,  &  graunt  to  &  with  the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires  &  as- 
signes, that  they  or  one  of  them,  shall  &  will  deliuer,  or  cause  to  be  deliuered, 
vnto  the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires  or  assignes,  all  &  singular  such  deeds, 
evidences,  &  writings  only  touching  or  concerning  the  premisses  seuerally,  & 
true  coppies  of  all  such  other  deeds,  evidences,  &  writings  w'=''  concerne  the 
pmisses,  w*  any  other  lands  or  tennements,  the  same  coppies  to  be  made  at 
the  only  cost  &  charges  of  the  sajd  Roger  Clap,  his  heires  or  assignes.  In 
wittnes  whereof,  the  sajd  Hanna  Munings  &  John  Wisewall  haue  heerevnto 
sett  theiie  hands  &  scales  this  fifFteenth  day  of  September,  1660. 

HANNA   MUNINGS,  &  a  seale, 
JOHN   WISWALL,  &  a  seale. 

Signed,  sealed,  &  deliuered,  the  sajd  Roger  Clap  being  in  possession,  in 

the  presenc  of  vs,  y^  fiifteenth  day  of  September,  1660.       John  Wisewall  & 

Hannah  Munings  signed,  sealed,  &  deliuered  this  deed,  the  day  aboue  sajd,  in 

the  presence  of  vs. 

THOMAS   SAUAGE, 

SYMON  COOLIDGE. 

Memorandum.     Before  the  sealing  &  deliuery  of  these  p^nts,  it  is  declared, 
&  by  all  partjes  concerned  vnderstood  &  consented  to,  that  the  w'^n  mentioned 


16  October. 


448  THE  RECOKDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  (5 GO.  Joliii  Wisewall  &  his  heires  are  uo  farther  nor  otherwise  bound  to  stand  to  & 
perfonne  the  couenants  &  warrantjes  w"'iu  mentioned  then  as  administrator,  or 
as  an  administrator  oiight  by  law  to  be  bound. 

The  Court  being  sattisfied  of  the  w'4n  mentioned  Maluilalecll  Miinings 
liis  sale  of  the  ■\v"'in  mentioned  &  graunted  pmisses,  &  receiving  full  sattisfac- 
tion  for  y*-'  same  in  his  life  time,  judge  meete  to  confirmc  &  allow  of  this  deede 
of  sale  made  by  y"  administrator  &  administratrix  w"'iu  mentioned,  and  order 
it  to  be  recorded,  any  law  notw*''standing. 

EDW:  KAWSON,  Secre'^. 

Ans'  to  M'  In  answer  to  the  peticon  of  M''  Jerremiah   Houchin  &  M''  Nathanlell 

\v-  petition.  Willjams,  guardians  to  two  of  the  childi-en  of  the  late  Edmond  Grosse,  the 
Coiut  judgeth  it  meete  y'  M''  Thomas  Savage  &  M''  Edward  Tyng  be  hereby 
apj)ointed  &  impowred  as  coinissioners  to  audit  the  acco'^  of  the  administrators 
&  present  the  same  to  y'  next  County  Court  ffor  Suffolke,  and  that  the  sajd 
Court  be  impowred  to  setle  the  divission  of  the  sajd  estate  betweene  the  widdow 
&  children,  and  as  ueere  as  may  be  according  to  the  mindc  of  the  deceased  de- 
clared as  his  will  before  his  death,  and  that  what  land  is  yett  vnsold  y'  it  be 
reserved  for  the  children,  &  not  sold  by  the  administrators. 
Ans' to  Josiah  In  ans'  to  the  petition  of  Josiah  Cooper  ffor  this  Courts  favor  to  heare  his 

coper  pe  ic.  gQj^pijjjjjt;  ^g*  M''  Peter  Hubbard,  in  relation  to  his  fathers  estate,  &<3,  the 
Court  judgeth  it  not  meet  to  graunt  his  request,  it  properly  belonging  to  the 
County  Court  in  Boston  to  determine. 


19  December.  Att    CI    Gencrall    Coitrt,    called    by    the  GoiCno'',   M''  Bradstreet,   8f 
Majo''  Atherton,  held  at  Boston,  19"'  December,  1660. 

Present,     John  Endecott,  Esq>,  GoQno'. 

Kich  Bellingham,  Es^,  Dep'  Goti. 
M'  Symon  Bradstreet, 
M''  Sam  Symonds, 
Caj)t  DanI  Gookin, 
Majo"^  Geii  Dani  Dennison, 
Majo"^  Symon  Willard, 
IMajo"^  Humphrey  Athcrton, 
M''  Rich  Ilusscll, 
M"^  Thomas  Danforth. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  449 

The  names  of  the   deputjes   returnd  to   serve  at  this  Gennerall  Court      166  0. 

■were,  —  *""     '*      ^ 

19  December 

Salem  :  Majo'  W"  Hauthorne,  M"^  Edmond  Batter. 

Charlstown :  Cap'^  Fauncis  Norton,  Lef?  Rich  Sprague. 

Dorchest"^ :  Left  Roger  Clapp,  Ensig  Hopestil  Foster. 

Boston  :  Capt  Tho  Sauage,  M'  Antho  Stoddard. 

Eoxbury :  W  W™  Parkes,  John  Ruggles. 

Water  Tow  :  Capt  Hugh  Mason,  M"'  Ephraim  Child. 

Lynn  :  M"'  Tho  Layton,  M'  Oliuer  Purchase. 

Cambridg  :  M^  Edw  Collins,  M"'  Edw  Oakes. 

Ipswich  :  Lef  ?  Jn"  Apleton,  M'  George  Gittings. 

Newbury  :  M'  Nicho  Nojes. 

Weimouth :  M'^  Edw  Bate. 

Concord  :   M'  Thomas  Brookes. 

Dedham  :  Cap?  Eliazer  Lusher,  Enslg  DanI  Fisher. 

Salisbury  :  !M''  Christoph'  Batt. 

Hampton :  Lef  ?  Christop'  Hussey. 

Eouley :  M'  Joseph  Jewett,  M''  Maximillian  Jewett. 

Braintry :  M'^  Peter  Brackett. 

Doner :  Cap?  Rich  Walderne. 

Portsmouth :  Capl  Brian  Pendleton. 

Yorke  :  Frauncis  Litlefeild. 

Woobourne :  Cap?  Edw  Johnson,  M'  Edw  Conuerse. 

Kittery ;  Left  Charles  Frost,  Peter  Weare. 

Salisbury,  [Sudbury] :  Lt  Edmo  Goodnow,  James  Blood. 

Hauerill :  James  Dauis. 

Maulden  :  M''  Joseph  Hills. 

Billirikey :  Lef  ?  W"  French. 

Redding  :  Cap?  Rich  Walker. 

Majo'  W™  Hauthorne  was  chosen  Speaker  for  y"  session. 

*r  I IHE  Court  being  mett  at  the  tjme  appointed,  the  GoOno"",  in  open  Court,      [*362.] 

JL  declared  the  ground  of  the  Courts  being  called  together.  Cap?  Leuer- 
etts  letter  was  read  in  open  Court ;  so  also  was  the  councills  letter  to  the  Earle 
of  Manchester  &  the  Lord  Say,  &6. 

Itt  is   ordered,  that  o'  addresses  be  made  to  the  kings  most  excellent 
majesty,  as  also  to  the  high  Court  of  Parljament,  and  is  as  follow :  — 
VOL.  IV. PART  1.  57 


450  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OP 

166  0.      To  the  high  &  mighty  Prince  Charles  the  Second,  by  the  grace  of  God  King 
'"^      ^  of  Great  Brittajue,  Fraunce,  &  Ireland,  Defender  of  the  Faith,  &S. 

19  Dece,mber. 

Most  gracious  &  dread  soueraigne :  — 

May  it  please  your  maj'^,  in  the  day  wherein  yow  happily  say  yow  now 
know  that  yow  are  king  ouer  your  Brittish  Israel,  to  cast  a  favorable  eye  vpon 
your  poore  Mephibbosheth,  now,  &,  by  reason  of  lamenes  in  lespect  of  dis- 
tance, not  vntill  now,  appearing  in  your  presence ;  wee  meane  vpon  New  Eng- 
land, kneeling  with  the  rest  of  your  subjects  before  yo"'  maj'J',  as  her  restored 
king  ;  wee  forgett  not  our  ineptnes  as  to  these  approaches.  Wee  at  present 
owne  such  irapotency  as  renders  vs  vnable  to  excuse  our  impotency  of  speaking 
vnto  our  lord  the  king ;  yet,  contemplating  such  a  king,  who  hath  also  scene 
adversity,  that  he  knoweth  the  heart  of  exiles,  who  himself  hath  binn  an 
exile,  the  aspect  of  majesty,  thus  extraordinaryly  circumstanced,  influenced, 
and  animateth  exanimated  outcasts  (yctt  outcasts,  as  wee  hope,  for  the  trueth) 
to  make  this  addresse  vnto  theire  prince.  Hoping  to  find  grace  in  yo''  sight, 
Avee  present  this  script,  the  transcript  of  our  loyall  hearts,  into  yo'  royall  hands, 
wherein  wee  craue  leaue 

To  supplicate  yo''  majesty  for  yo""  gracious  protection  of  vs  in  the  con- 
tinuance both  of  our  civil  priviledges  according  to  (&  of  our  religion  & 
libertjes)  the  grauntees  knowne  end,  of  suing  for  the  pattent  conferred  vpon 
this  plantation  by  your  royall  fFather.  This,  this,  viz',  our  libertje  to  walke 
in  the  faith  of  the  gospell  w*  all  good  conscience  according  to  the  order  of 
the  gospell,  (vnto  which  the  former  in  these  ends  of  the  earth  is  but  subser- 
vient,) was  the  cause  of  our  transporting  ourselves,  w*  our  wiues,  our  litle 
ones,  &  oiu-  substance,  from  that  jjlcasant  land  ouer  the  Atlanticke  Ocean  into 
the  vast  &  wast  wildernes,  choosing  rather  the  pure  Scripture  worship,  w""  a 
good  conscienc,  in  this  poore,  remote  wildernes,  amongst  the  heathens,  then 
the  pleasures  of  England,  w"'  submission  to  the  impositions  of  the  then  so 
disposed  &  so  farre  prevayling  hierarchic,  w''''  wee  could  not  doe  w"'out  an 
evill  conscience.  For  this  cause  wee  are  at  this  day  in  a  land  w'^''  lately  was  not 
sound,  wherein  wee  haue  conflicted  w"'  the  sufferings  thereof  much  longer 
then  Jacob  was  in  Syrria. 

Our  wittnes  is  in  heaven,  that  wee  left  not  our  countrje  vpon  any  dissattis- 
faction  as  to  the  constitution  of  the  civil  state.  Our  lott,  after  the  example  of 
the  good  old  non  conformist,  hath  binn  only  to  act  a  passiue  part  through  out 
these  late  vicissitudes  &  successiue  ouerturnings  of  state.  Our  seperation 
fi-om  our  brethren  in  this  desart  hath  binn  &  is  a  sufficjent  bringing  to  minde 
the  afliction  of  Joseph  ;  but  providentiall  exemption  of  vs  hereby  from  the  late 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND. 


45J 


19  December 


WcOiTS  &  temptations   of  either  party  wee  account  as  a  ftivo''  from  God;  the      16  6  0. 
former  cloaths  vs  w"^  sack  cloth,  the  latter  with  innocence. 

What  reception,  curtesy,  &  tequanimitje  those  gen'"  &  others,  adh£ere''s  to 
the  royall  interest,  who,  in  theire  adverse  chainges,  vissited  these  parts,  were 
enterteined  w"'  amongst  vs  according  to  the  meanes  of  our  condition,  wee 
appeale  to  theire  owne  report. 

Touching  complaints  putt  in  against  vs,  our  humble  request  only  is,  that 
for  the  interim  wherein  wee  are  as  dunibe,  by  reason  of  absence,  yo"^  maj*^" 
•would  permitt  nothing  to  make  an  impression  vpon  yo''  royall  heart  against  [*363.] 
vs,  vntill  wee  haue  both  oppertunity  &  licence  to  answerc  for  ourselves.  '  Few 
willbe  nocent,'  sajd  that  impleader,  'if  it  be  enough  to  deny.'  'Few  will  be 
innocent,'  replyed  the  then  emperor,  'if  it  be  enough  to  accuse.' 

Concerning  the  Quakers,  open  &  capitall  blasphemers,  open  seducers 
from  the  glorious  Trinity,  the  Lords  Christ,  our  Lord  Jesus  Christ,  &d,  the 
blessed  gospell,  and  from  the  Holy  Scriptures  as  the  rule  of  life,  open  enne- 
mjes  to  gouernment  itself  as  established  in  the  hands  of  any  but  men  of  theire 
oune  principles,  malignant  &  assiduous  promoters  of  doctrines  directly  tend- 
ing to  subvert  both  our  churches  &  state,  after  all  other  meanes  for  a  long 
time  vsed  in  vajne,  wee  were  at  last  constrejned,  for  our  oune  safety,  to  passe 
a  sentence  of  banuishnient  against  them,  vpon  pajne  of  death.  Such  was  theire 
daingerous,  impetuous,  &  dcsperat  turbulcncy,  both  to  religion  &  the  state 
ciuil  &  eclesiasticall,  as  that,  how  vnwillingly  soeuer,  could  it  haue  binn 
avoyded,  the  magistrate  at  last,  in  conscience  both  to  God  &  man,  judged  him- 
self called,  for  the  defence  of  all,  to  kecpe  the  passage  w"'  the  point  of  the 
sword  held  towards  them.  This  could  doe  no  harme  to  him  that  would  be 
warned  thereby:  theire  wittingly  rushing  themselves  therevpon  was  theire 
oune  act,  &  wee,  w""  all  humillity,  conceive  a  crjme  bringing  theire  blood  on 
theire  oune  head.  The  Quakers  died,  not  because  of  theire  other  crimes, 
how  capitoll  soeuer,  but  vpon  theire  superadded  presumptuous  &  incorrigible 
contempt  of  authority ;  breaking  in  vpon  vs,  notw"'standing  theire  sentence 
of  bannishment  made  knoune  to  them.  Had  they  not  binn  restreined,  so  farr 
as  appeared,  there  was  too  much  cause  to  fcare  that  wee  ourselves  must 
quickly  haue  djed,  or  worse ;  and  such  was  theire  insolency,  that  they  would 
not  be  restreined  but  by  death ;  nay,  had  they  at  last  but  promised  to  depart 
the  jurisdiction,  &  not  to  returne  w'^'out  leaue  from  authority,  wee  should 
haue  binn  glad  of  such  an  oppertunity  to  haue  sayd  they  should  not  dye. 

Lett  not  the  king  heare  mens  words.  Yo"'  servants  are  true  men,  fearers 
of  God  &  the  king,  not  given  to  chainge,  zealous  of  gouernment  &  order. 


19  December. 


452  THE    RECORDS    OP    THE    COLONY     OP 

1660.      orthodox  and  peaceable  in  Israeli;    wee  are  not  seditious  as   to  the   inter 
est  of  Caesar,  nor  schismaticks  as  to  the  matters  of  religion ;  wee  distinguish 
betweene  churches  &  theire  impuritys,  betweene  a  Ijving  man,  tho  not  w^'out 
sicknes  or  infirmitje,  or  no  man.      Irregularitjes,  either  in  ourselves  or  others, 
wee  desire  to  be  amended. 

Wee  could  not  liue  w^'out  the  publicke  worship  of  God.  Wee  were 
not  pmitted  the  vse  of  publicke  worship  w"'out  such  a  yoake  of  subscription 
&  conformity  as  wee  could  not  consent  vnto  w"'out  sinne.  That  wee  might 
therefore  enjoy  divine  worship  w*out  the  humajne  mixtures,  w'^out  offence 
either  to  God,  man,  or  our  owue  consciences,  wee  w"'  leaue,  but  not  w^'out 
teares,  dejsarted  from  our  country,  kindred,  &  fathers  houses,  into  this  Path- 
mos,  in  relation  wherevnto  wee  doe  not  say  our  garments  are  become  old  by 
reason  of  the  very  long  journey,  but  that  ourselves,  who  came  away  in  our 
strength,  are,  by  reason  of  very  long  absence,  many  of  vs  become  grey  head- 
ed, &  some  of  vs  stooping,  for  age.  The  omission  of  the  prementioned  in- 
junctions, together  w"'  the  walking  of  oiu'  churches,  as  to  the  point  of  order, 
the  congegationall  way  is  all  wherein  wee  differ  from  our  Orthodox  brethren. 
S'',  wee  lye  not  before  yo''  sacred  maj'je.  The  Lord  God  of  gods,  the  Lord 
God  of  gods,  he  knoweth,  &  Israeli  he  shall  know  ;  if  it  were  in  rebellion  or 
schisme  that  wee  wittingly  left  our  dwellings  in  our  owue,  or  continew  our 
dwellings  in  this  strainge  land,  saue  vs  not  this  day. 

[*364.J  *Iloyall  S'':  If,  according  to  this  our  humble  petition  &  good  hope,  the 

God  of  the  spirritts  of  all  flesh,  the  Father  of  mercjes,  who  comfortetli  the 
abject,  shall  make  the  permission  of  the  bereavement  of  that  all  for  w'^''  wee  haue 
and  doe  suflTer  the  losse  of  all  pretious,  so  pretious  in  yo""  sight,  as  that  yo''  royall 
heart  shall  be  inclined  to  shew  vnto  vs  the  kindues  of  the  Lord  in  your  highnes 
protection  of  vs  in  those  libertjes  for  ^v'^^  wee  hither  came,  and  which  hither- 
to wee  haue  heere  enjoyed  vpon  Hezekiahs  speaking  comfortably  to  vs  as  to 
sonnes,  this  orphant  shall  not  continew  ffatherlesse,  but  growe  vp  as  a  revived 
infant  vnder  its  nursing  ffiither.  These  churches  shallbe  comforted ;  a  doore 
of  liopc  opened  by  so  signall  a  pledge  of  the  lengthening  of  theire  tranc[uillity  ; 
these  poore  &  naked  Gentiles,  not  a  few  of  whom  thro  grace  are  come  and 
coming  in,  shall  still  see  theire  wonted  teachers  w"'  the  incouragement  of  a 
more  plentifuU  increase  of  the  kingdome  of  Christ  amongst  them  ;  and  the 
blessing  of  yo''  poore  aflictcd,  (and  yet,  wee  hope,)  a  people  tiiisting  in  God, 
shall  come  vpon  the  head  &  heart  of  that  great  king  who  was  sometime  an 
exile  as  wee  are. 

With  the  religious  stijipulation  of  our  prajers,  wee,  prostrate  at  yo''  rojall 


THE   MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  453 

feete,  begg  pardon  for  this  oui-  boldnes,  craving  finally  that  our  names  may  be      1  G  G  0. 
enrolled  amongst  '' 

19  December. 

Yo-^  maj'jcs  most  humble  ^y.^  „^3  ^„b- 

Subjects  &  suppliants,  ^""^^'i  *  ™"* 

"^  accordingly. 

JOHN  ENDECOTT,  GoQno^  in  the  name  & 
by  the  order  of  the  Generall  Court  of  y°  Massachusetts. 

To  the  Eight  Honno'''*  the  Lords  &  CoiSons  now  assembled  in  Parljament. 

The  humble  peticon  &  addresse  of  the  Generall  Court  of  the  Colony  of  the 

Massachusetts  in  New  England 
Humbly  sheweth,  — 

That  yo''  peticbn's  left  theire  deare  native  countrje,  vndertooke  the  haz- 
ards of  a  daingerous  vojage  ouer  the  vast  ocean,  exposed  themselves,  theire 
wives  &  children,  to  the  perills  &  dlfficultjes  of  a  desart  wildernes,  vpon  no 
dissattisfaction  as  to  ciuill  gouernment,  but  that  w"'out  offence  to  God  &  our 
oune  consciences,  wee  might  worship  God  w"^out  those  humaine  mixtures 
which  were  imposed  by  the  then  prevayling  hierarchie.  Vpon  the  incourage- 
ment  of  his  late  majetjes  letters  pattents,  vnder  the  securitje  whereof  your 
peticoners,  at  theire  oune  charge,  transplanted  themselves,  and  for  these  thir- 
tje  yeares  haue  continued  here  vndisturbed,  and  enjoyed  the  rights  &  privi- 
ledges  graunted  by  pattent. 

But  so  it  is,  right  honno'''"',  (as  wee  are  informed,)  that  endeavo's  haue 
binn  vsed  to  render  vs  obnoxious,  w*  wee  haue  good  reason  to  hope  will  finde 
no  reception  w"*  yo'  honno's,  and  thereby  wee  are  encouraged  to  supplicat 
this  most  noble  senate  (as  wee  haue  our  gracious  soueraigne)  to  extend  yo"' 
favorable  protection  ouer  vs  in  the  enjoyments  of  our  just  priviledges,  so 
graunted  and  so  long  enjoyed  by  vs. 

*Wee  are  not  vnwilling,  &  hope  wee  necde  not  be  ashamed  to  giue  [*365.J 
your  hono'"s  an  account  w"'  what  integritje  &  simplicitje  of  heart  wee  haue 
mannaged  the  trust  comittcd  to  vs,  or  excercised  any  power,  tho  perhaps  to  the 
dissattisfaction  of  some  noccnt ;  your  more  serious  concernments  forbids  vs  to 
presume  to  trouble  your  honno''s  w"'  any  defence,  because  perhaps  but  at 
randome  ;  and  wee  haue  this  hope,  that  yo'^  honno''  will  be  very  tender  of 
admitting  of  appeales  in  particular  cases,  as  not  only  pjudicall,  but  euen 
destructiue  to  vs.  The  right  honno'''"'  lords  comission''s  for  plantations  were 
pleased  prudently  to  intimate  to  vs  in  theire  letters  y''  25"'  of  May,  1647.  Our 
defence  made  to  his  majestie,  and  our  printed  declaration,  wee  hope  will  abun- 
dantly sattisfy  concerning  our  proceedings  against  the  Quakers. 


454  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY  OF 

1  G  G  0.  Our  late  claymlng  &  exccrcising  jurisdiction  ouer  sonic  plantations  to  the 

"~     ""^       ^    eastward  of  vs,  supposed  to  be  ^"^001  the  Ijmitts  of  our  patteut,  was  vpoa 

11)  Dpcpnibpt". 

the  petition  of  sonudry  the  inhabitants  there,  and  after  an  exact  survey  of  the 

Courts  address  i  ^  ^  j 

to  y  High        bounds  graunted  vs,  not  out  of  desire  to  extend  a  dominion,  much  lesse  to 

Court  of  Par-  .  •    i  i  •  i  i  •       i 

liam'.  p>judice  any  mans  right,  wherein  wee  hope  wee  haue  not  mistaken,  yet  must 

&  shall,  willingly  reserving   liberty  of  making   our  defence,  submitt  to  the 
pleasure  of  his  majesty  &  the  high  Court  of  Parliam'. 

For  complaints  in  any  other  particcular  case,  your  honors  very  well  know 
none  cann  be  innocent  if  an  accusation  may  passe  for  a  conviction,  and  there- 
fore wee  assure  ourselves  yo'  honnors  will  be  deaffe  whilst  wee  must  be  (by 
reason  of  cm-  distance)  dumbe. 

Right  honno''ble,  yo'  favorable  aspect  vpon  this  poore  colony  wee  hope 
will  advance  the  honnor  of  God  and  the  king,  f  vayling  motiues  w""  pious  & 
noble  patriotts. 

It  cannot  but  be  most  honnoble  for  his  majesty  to  rattify  &  confirme  the 
grauut  of  his  royall  ffather,  and  the  priviledgcs  enjoyed  by  his  subjects,  not 
only  in  his  dayes,  but  vnder  all  the  powers  that  haue  since  ^vayled,  that  wee 
may  not  be  loosers  by  his  majestys  restitution,  but  may  haue  cause,  w*  the 
rest  of  our  countrymen,  to  joyiie  our  joyfuU  aclamatlon,  Vivat  Carolus 
Secundus. 

God  is  hoiiored,  whiles  the  poore  Indians  are  made  pertakers  of  the  true 
knowledge  of  the  Sonne  of  God  in  a  more  hopcfuU  way  then  wee  haue  heard 
elswhere,  &  that  by  the  great  charity  of  many  pious  benefactors  in  our  natiue 
country,  encouraged  and  allowed  by  authoritje  there,  which  was  also  a  princi- 
pall  intent  of  liis  majestie  declared  in  the  pattent,  which  pious  &  charitable 
worke  will,  wee  doubt  not,  be  so  acceptable  to  yo''  honnors  that  no  encourag- 
ment  shall  be  wanting  on  yo'  part  which  may  be  expected  or  desired  of  the 
professed  servants  of  the  Lord  Jesus. 

In  these  &  many  other  considerations  wee  promise  ourselves,  &  humbly 
beg  yo'  honnors  favor  &  encouragement  in  the  premisses,  w'^''  craning  pardon 
for  thus  interrupting  yo'  more  vrgent  occasions,  &  craving  for  yow  the  gui- 
dance &  asistance  of  the  wonderfull  Counseller,  the  Prince  of  Peace,  is  the 
humble  peticon  of 

Yo''  honnors  most  humble  suppliants, 

JOHN  ENDECOTT,  Goan--,  in  y"  name  &  by  y« 
order  of  y"  Geii  Court  of  the  Massachusets  jurisdiction  in  N:  England. 


THE    MASSACHUSETTS    BAY    IN    NEW    ENGLAND.  455 

lustruccons  for  our  honnored  &  loving  freinds.  Cap?  John  Lcucret,  or,  in  his      1  (I(!0. 
absence,  Richard  Saltonstall  &  Henry  Ashurst,  Es^s.  '' 

19  December. 

1.  Yow  are  to  take  the  first  opportunity  that  may  be,  in  the  best  &  most 
acceptable  manner,  to  deliuer  the  petitions  herew"»  sent  to  his  maj^e  &  high 
Court  of  Parliam'. 

2.  To  interest  as  many  gcril  of  worth  in  Parliam',  or  that  are  neere  vnto 
his  maj'^",  as  possibly  may  to  oune  &  fauor  our  cause,  &  to  beget  in  them  a 
good  opinion  of  vs  &  our  proceedings.  3.  By  all  possible  meanes  to  gett  speedy 
&  true  information  of  his  maj'-'"  sence  of  our  petition,  &  of  the  gouernm'  & 
people  hcere,  together  w*''  y"  like  of  y^  Parliam'^  4.  If  the  king  or  Parlia- 
ment should  demand  what  those  priviledges  are  which  wee  desire,  the  contin- 
uance of  yo'  answer  may  be,  all  those  vf"^  are  graunted  vs  by  pattent,  &  that 
wee  haue  hitherto  enjoyed  in  church  &  coiiionwealth,  w*''out  any  other  power 
imposed  ouer  vs,  or  any  other  infringement  of  them  w"*"  would  be  destructiue 
to  the  ends  of  our  comeing  hither ;  as  also  that  no  appeales  maybe  permitted 

from  hence  in  any  case,  civill  or  criminall,  yv"^  would  be  such  *an  intoUerable  [*366.] 
&  vnsupportable  burthen  as  this  poore  place  (at  this  distance)  are  not  able  to 
vndergoe,  but  would  render  authority  &  goflinnt  vajne  &  vneffectuall,  &  bring 
vs  into  contempt  w""  all  sorts  of  people  ;  and  if  yow  fiude  the  king  &  Parlia- 
ment propitious  to  vs,  to  vse  yo""  vtmost  endeavors  for  the  renewing  y*  act  that 
freed  vs  from  customes. 

5.  Vpon  any  matter  of  complaint  by  any  of  his  maj'-'"  subjects,  or 
others,  relating  to  the  bounds  &  limitts  of  our  pattent,  our  humble  desire  is, 
that  wee  may  haue  notice  thereof,  &  liberty  to  answer  for  ourselves,  before 
any  determination  or  conclusion  be  made  against  vs,  w"""  being  donne,  wee 
shall  finally  acquiesse  in  such  issue  as  his  maj'^,  the  high  Court  of  Parliam', 
or  any  substituted  by  them,  shall  put  thereto. 

6.  If  any  thing  be  perticcularly  alleadged  relating  to  the  iron  works,  the 
■  answer  is,  it  was  first  heard  &  judged  in  an  inferior  Court,  &  afterwards 

vpon  a  full  hearing  &  due  consideration  by  the  Generall  Court,  who  gaue 
judgment  impartially  according  to  the  pleas  &  evidences  then  produced,  & 
shall  be  ready,  if  desired,  vpon  new  evidence  &  better  pleas,  to  allow  another 
hearing  thereof;  and  for  further  &  more  perticuler  answer  herevnto  wee  must 
referr  yow  to  what  yow  know  or  hath  beene  formerly  informed  from  hence. 

7.  Concerning  o''  proceedings  against  the  Quakers,  our  ans''  is  conteined 
in  our  printed  declarations  &  petition  to  his  maj'je,  w"^"*  wee  hope  will  sattisfy ; 
but  if  there  should  be  any  designe  to  incourage  theire  coming  hither,  or  his 
maj'J"  induced  to  permitt  them  theire  liberty  here,  (w^''  God  forbid,)  wee  en- 


456  THE  RECORDS  OF  THE  COLONY. 

1660.      treate  yow  aboue  all  things  els  to  vse  yo""  vtmost  interest  to  pvent,  as  being 
'       "^       '    destructiue  to  our  being  here,  &  so  contrary  to  our  consciences  to  permitt, 
^  &  no  lesse  oppssion  of  vs  then  the  destroying  of  vs  &  ours  by  the  sword. 

8.  To  giue  vs  as  full  intelligence  as  may  be  by  the  first  opportunity*  of 
all  matters  that  concerns  vs,  &  what  yow  conceiue  necessary  to  be  donne  for 
our  advantage. 

9.  If  any  objection  be  made  that  wee  haue  forfeited  our  pattent  in  seuer 
al  perticculars,  yow  may  ans'',  that  yow  desier  to  know  the  perticculars  objected, 
and  that  yow  doubt  not  but  a  full  ans''  will  be  giuen  thereto  in  due  season. 

10.  Finally,  it  is  our  meaning  that,  if  in  publicke  yow,  or  either  of  yow, 
be  called  to  answer  to  those  or  any  other  perticulars,  that  yow  giue  them  to  vn- 
derstand  that  wee  could  not  impower  any  agent  to  act  for  vs,  or  answer  in  our 
behalfe,  because  wee  could  not  forsee  the  perticculars  wherewith  wee  should  be 
charged ;  but  these  are  only  private  intimations  to  yo''selves,  which  wee  desire 
yow  to  make  vse  off  for  our  indemnity  as  yow  best  may,  in  a  more  privat  way 
&  personall  capacity.  The  addresses  &  instructions  aboue  &  on  y'  other  sides 
written  were  ordered  to  be  sent  in  a  short  letter  to  Capt  Leuerett,  &  in  case 
of  his  absenc,  to  M'^  Eich  Saltonstall  &  M'  Heniy  Ashurst,  w"^"*  letters  are 
on  file. 


MISCELLANEOUS   RECORDS. 


MASSACHUSETTS    RECORDS. 


MISCELLANEOUS   ENTRIES   CONTAINED   IN   PART   FIRST   OF 
THE  FOURTH  VOLUME   OF   RECORDS. 

Freemen  of  the  Colony  of  the  Massachusetts  Bay  in  J\^ew  England, 

1650—1660. 

[The  foUomng  lists  contain  the  names  of  those  who  took  the  freeman's  oath  at  the  General  Courts 
of  Election,  and  are  entered  in  the  margins  of  that  [jorti(m  of  the  fourth  volume  which  is  comprised  in 
this.  They  are  iu  the  handwriting  of  Secretary  Eawson.  Names  of  persons  who  took  the  oath  at  other 
times  and  places,  and  which  are  included  iu  the  returns  of  commissioners,  will  be  found  printed  in  the 
precediug  pages  of  this  volume.] 


•The  names  of  such  as 

Johu  Shepheard, 
Henry  Prentice, 
Abraham  Busby, 
Jacob  Greene, 
Richard  Slower, 
Thomas  Welch, 
W""  Pajne, 
David  Mattocke, 
John  Sannders, 
Rob*  Parmiter, 
Peeter  Addams, 


were  made  free  before 
[22  May,  1650.] 

John  Jones, 
Joshua  Edmonds, 
W™  Vnderwood, 
Nathaniell  Bale, 
Joseph  Mirriam, 
Isack  Addington, 
Habbacuck  Glouer, 
Samuell  Foster, 
John  Weld, 
Rob'  Harris, 


the   Eleccon  the  same  day,      1650. 


Georg  Brand, 
Samuell  Williams, 
Thomas  Hanford, 
John  Parker, 
M""  John  Knoules, 
John  Ball, 
Rob'  Pearse, 
Henry  Mason, 
W-"  Ireland, 
Edmond  Broune. 


22  May. 


*The  names  of  such  as  were  made  ffree  before  the  Eleccon  the  same  day, 

[7  May,  1651.] 

W-  Blake,- 
Aron  Way, 
Josias  Convers, 
John  Brookes, 
John  Mousell, 
Hugh  Thomas, 
Charles  Grise, 


M'^  Sam:  Haugh, 
Rich:  Whitney, 
Rich:  Ouldam, 
W"  Hamlett, 
John  Taylor, 
Henry  Butler, 
George  Fry, 
W"  Pratt, 


Martjn  Saunders, 
Samuell  Kingsly, 
W-"  Owen, 
David  Walsby, 
Edward  Rise, 
Solomon  Johnson, 
Georg  Dell. 


1651. 

7  May. 

[*33.] 


(459) 


460 


MISCELLANEOUS    KECORDS. 


16  52. 

26  May. 

•[*75.j 


25  February. 


*The  names  of  such  as  were  made  free  before  the  Eleccbn  the  same  day, 

[26  May,  1652.] 


Joseph  Eocke, 
James  Richards, 
Tho:  Einans, 
Henry  Steevens,  Bost. 
Jo:  Mairjon, 
Eob'  Sanforth, 
Joshua  Brooke,  Cone. 
Joseph  Knight, 
Hen:  Baldwine,  Woob. 
Rich:  Gardjner, 


Tho:  Wisewall,  Dorch. 


Jn"  Sawen,  Water. 

Ric  Norcrosse, 

Niccolas  Willjams, 

Isacke  Heath, 

W""  Garey, 

Peleg  Heath,  Roxbur. 

Tho:  Brewar, 

Jacob  French,  Weim. 

W"  Atwood,  Charles  T. 


Frauncis  Moore, 

Dan:  Bloget, 

W"  Bordman,  Camb. 

Solomon  Martjn,  And. 

James  Blake,  Dorch. 

Tho:  Prentice, 

Jn°  PeirPoint,  Rox. 

Moses  CoUjer,  Hing. 

Jn°  Fering. 


Made  free  Feb.,  52. 
^  Norcross,  Water  T.     Rob'  Howard,  Dorch. 


1653. 

18  May. 
[*113.] 


*The  names  of  such  as  were  made  free  before  y"  Eleccon  y^  same  day, 

[18  May,  1653,] 


Mr  W"  Hubbard,  I. 
Symon  Stone,  W. 
Sam:  Stratten, 
Abra:  Newell,  Rox. 
Jos:  Griggs, 
Tho:  Stowe,  C. 
W"  Martjn, 
W""  Eaton, 
Jonas  Eaton, 
Tho:  Marshall, 
Tho:  Dwight, 
Tho:  Medcalfe, 


Read. 


^Ded. 


W"  Hilton,  Newb 
Tho:  Skinner 
Jn°  Spragc, 
Nath:  Vpham,  J 
Rich:  Boulter, 
Tho:  Whitman, 
Walter  Cooke, 
Jn"  Guppee, 
Jn"  Thompson, 
Jonas  Humphry, 
Richard  Porter, 
W""  Reade, 


Maid. 


T 


J"  Weim 


Joshua  Hubbard, 
Jerremjah  Hubbard, 
Jn°  Wight,         1 
W"  Patridg,       [ 
Joseph  Clarke,  , 
Nath:  Souther, 
Steeven  Pajne, 
Joseph  Addams, 


5 

05 


Meadf. 


Bosto, 


1654. 

~~~>    -' 

3  May. 
[*160.] 


*Made  fee  [3  May,    1654.] 


Jn°  Morse, 
Jacob  Eliott, 
Jn"  Tinker, 
Hugh  Drury, 
Jn"  Parker, 
Tho:  Weld, 
Jn°  Rugles, 
Nath:  Glouer, 
Jacke  Jones, 
Tho:  Hinksman, 


Sam:  Hunt, 
Caleb  Brooke, 
Tho:  Marsh, 
Michaell  Knight, 
Jn°  Kent, 
Tho:  Battle, 
Tho:  Herring, 
Joseph  Child, 
Frank  Whitmore, 
Tho:  Sawer, 


Jn"  Greene, 
Joseph  Champney, 
Alex:  Marsh, 
Jn°  Fasell, 
Edw:  Addams, 
W-"  Chard, 
James  Smith, 
Andrew  Foored, 
Jn"  Smith, 
W-"  Marble. 


MISCELLANEOUS    KECORDS. 


461 


*At  w'^^  Court  [33  May,  1655]   was  made  fFree 


*The  names  of  such  as   wcnc  made  ffico,  &  tooku  tlicire  oathes  in  open 

Court,  [U  May,  1656.] 


*The  names  of  such  as  were  made  flree  at  this  Cour,  &  tooke  theire 
oathes  [6  May,   1657]  were, — 


1G55. 


M'"  Seaborn  Cotton, 

W"'  Hilton, 

W'"  Reade, 

23  May. 

Abra:  Newell, 

Tho:  Skinner, 

Symon  Stone, 

[n94.] 

Joseph  Griggs, 

Jn"  Sprauge, 

.  Sam:  Straiten, 

Tho:  Stowe, 

Nathan:  Vpham, 

Joshua  Hubbard, 

M^  W"  Hubbard, 

Rich:  Boulter, 

Jcrremy  Hubbard, 

W"'  Martyn, 

Thomas  Whitman, 

Jn"  Wight, 

■W"  Eaton, 

AYalter  Cooke, 

W">  Patridge, 

Jonas  Eaton, 

Ju°  Guppce, 

Joseph  Clarke, 

Thomas  Marshall, 

Jn°  Thompson, 

Steeven  Pajne, 

Timo:  Dwight, 

Jonas  Humphry, 

Joseph  Addams, 

Tho:  Medcalf, 

Rich:  Porter, 

W'»  Johnson. 

1G5G. 


14  May. 

JP  Sam:  Bradstreet, 

Tho:  Read, 

Jn"  Chadwlcke, 

r*2i9.] 

]\P  Sam:  Whiting, 

Tho:  Basse, 

Steeven  Gates, 

L                      J 

]\P  W'"  Thompson, 

Hen:  Wooddeys, 

Abr:  Ripley, 

Job  Lane, 

Abr:  Jackewish, 

Jn"  Ripley. 

Jn"  Freary, 

1G57. 


6  May. 

Willjam  Lane, 

George  Sumer, 

Jacob  Park, 

[*241.] 

Henry  Douglas, 

Justinian  Houlden, 

Leonard  Hurryman, 

Joseph  How, 

Anthony  Beers, 

Francis  Weyman, 

W'"  Dinsdale, 

Jer:  Beales, 

Sam:  Stone, 

Amiell  Weekes, 

Rich:  Griffyn, 

Tho:  Fa.^on, 

Roger  Sumner, 

Humphry  Barrat, 

Jn°  Dussett. 

•Persons  made  ffree  &  y'  tooke  y"'  oathes,  [30  May,   1660.] 


IGGO. 


C!olonell  W"  Croune, 

Jn"  Elliott, 

Jacob  He  wen, 

30  May. 

Augustin  Lindon, 

Alex:  Pannly, 

Nath:  Clap, 

[*336.] 

Tho^  Dinsdsall, 

W-  Wheeler, 

Tho:  Rand, 

Tho:  Watkins, 

Jn"  Billing, 

Josiah  Hubbard, 

Hugh  Clarke, 

Tho:  Rice, 

James  Whitton, 

Jn"  Majes, 

Mathew  Rice, 

John  Nutting, 

Sam:  Majes, 

Hen:  Spring, 

Phillip  Read. 

GENERAL    INDEX. 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


Abdy,  Matthew, 312 

Acadia  and  Nova  Scotia,  order  concerning  fur 

trade  in, 355 

Accomenticus,  see  Agamentieus. 
Actions  at  law,  parties  to  be  nonsuited  or  de- 
faulted for  non-appearance,  &c.,  and, 
in  such  cases,  new  fee  for  reentry  to 

be  paid, 4 

for  trespass,  order  concerning, 4 

plaintiff  to  take  out  either  summons  or  at- 
tachment, as  he  may  elect,   ....      5 
order  concerning  entry  of.  by  strangers,     .     20 
attachments  of  goods  and  bonds  for  ap- 
pearance to  continue  in  force  till  exe- 
cution is  satisfied, 26,  27 

evidence,  on  trial,  to  be  in  writing,   ...     27 
order  concerning  costs,  &c.,  in  actions  for 

trespass, 27 

parties  appealing  and  not  prosecuting  ap- 
peal to  be  fined, 38 

plaintiff  to  state  in  what  capacity  he  sues, 

whether  as  executor,  attorney,  &c.,     .     38 
to  be  tried  by  the  Court  unless  either  party 

desires  a  jury,  &c., 81 

fees  for  entry  in  Court  of  Commissioners 

at  Boston, 104 

to  be  tried  at  election  of  plaintiff,  &c.,  .     .  105 
triable  in  the  Commissioners  Court  of  Bos- 
ton, &c.,  order  concerning,     ....   105 

law  omitting  juries  repealed, 107 

fees  of  marshal  for  services, 152 

appeals  not  to  be  heard  by  any  that  tried 

the  case  in  the  Court  appealed  from,  .  152 

order  concerning  appeals, 183 

carried  to  the  General  Court  to  be  there 
determined  as  cases  stated ;  the  par- 
ti 3s'  names  to  be  omitted,      .     .     .     .184 
VOL.    IV. P.\RT    I.  59 


Actions  at  law,  judgments  and  executions  not 

to  be  assigned, 202 

plaintiff  dying,  administrator  may  take  out 

execution, 202 

affirmation  to  be  proved  by  plaintiff;  spe- 
cial verdicts   allowed  but  non  liquet 

prohibited, 290,  291 

transferred  from  inferior  Courts  to  be  by 

copies  under  the  hand  of  the  clerk,     .  280 
decision   concerning    execution  of  judg- 
ments, &c., 313 

decision  concerning  appeals, 351 

restriction  of  minor  actions  of  trespass, .     .  351 
order  concerning  levy  of  executions,      .     .  365 
upon  disagreement  of  bench  and  jury,  to 
go  to  Court  of  Assistants,  not  to  the 

General  Court, 381 

Adams,  Addams,  Alexander, 64 

George, 133 

Philip, 129 

Henry,  deputy, 365 

Richard, 177 

Administration  of  estates,  see  Estates. 

Admiralty  law,  see  Lex  Mercatoria. 

Adultery,  decision  by  the  General  Court  on  a 

case  stated, 212 

Affidavits,  order  concerning  proper  framing  and 

writing  of, 85 

Agamentieus  or  Gorgeana,  freemen  admitted  at,  129 

called  York, 129 

Aires  [Eire],  Simon,  to  be  paid  for  medicine, 

&c., 89 

Aixey,  James,  deputy, 181 

Alcock,  John, 129,  436 

land  laid  out  to, 227 

committee  appointed  to  locate  lands  for,    .  268 
petition  of,  concerning  grant  of  land,     .     .  296 

(465) 


466 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Alcock,  John,  petition  concerning  grant  of  land 

at  Whipsufferage, 403 

Mr., 317 

Alciicke,  Samuel, 129 

Alcoke,  Joseph, 129 

Alice,  a  Welsh  woman,  to  be  sent  home,     .     .     92 

icleased  from  prison, 112 

Aileii,  Bo/.oon, 25,  42 

captain  at  Hingham, 47 

to  be  paid  for  powder,  &c., 68 

inspector  of  leather, 93 

deceased,  his  widow,  Edward  Rawson,  and 

Jeremiah  Howchin  executors  of  will  of,  116 

deputy, 2,  77 

Edward, 148 

John, 10 

deputy, 37 

pastor  of  Dedham,  farm  laid  out  to,    .     .1 74 
overseer  of  Harvard  College, ....  204 
Margaret,  authorized   to   confirm   sale  of 
house  of  E.  Lamb  to  Thomas  Boyden,     31 

Samuel, 31 

Thomas,  committee  on  Harvard  College,  .  362 

Allyn,  Mr., 280 

Allerton's  Point, 115 

Ancient    and    Honorable   Artillery   Company, 

land  located  for, 243 

part  of  former  grant  located, 308 

See  Military  Company  of  Massachusetts. 

Ancor,  Thomas, 373 

Audover, 194,  201 

deputy  of, 37 

bounds,  committee  to  settle, 96 

highways  to  Ipswich,  Rowley,  and  New- 
bury, committee  to  locate,      .     .     .     .103 

highway, 138 

and  Reading,  committee  appointed  to  lo- 
cate highway  between,      146 

to  Reading,  return  of  committee  to  locate 

highway  from. 178 

and  Killerica,  line  between,  altered,      .     .  333 
Andrew.s,  Andrewes,  John,      .     .  124,  329,  373,  401 
Samuel,  and  Jonas  Clarke  appointed  sur- 
veyors of  north  bounds  of  Massachu- 
setts,     178 

return    of,    concerning    observation    of 

north  line, 207 

Angler,  Edmund, 9 

Sampson, 129 

Antigua,  trade  with,  forbidden, 40 

Appeals,  see   Actions  at   law ;  also   Criminal 
Proceedings. 

Appleton,  John, 292,  317 

deputy, 255,  286',  321,  364,  449 

and  Mrs.  Priscilla  Glover  authorized  to  be 

married, 74 


Appleton,   Lieutenant,   petition  of,   concerning 

estate  of  Josse  Glover, 214 

Apprentices  not  liable  for  their  masters'  debts,  150 
Aquedahtan,  the   name  of  the  head  of  Merri- 

mac  River, 109 

Archer,  Archard,  Samuel, 198,  281 

and  others  vs.  Henry  Webb, 374 

Armitage,  Joseph, 51 

and  Thomas  Williams,  case  between,  re- 
ferred,       318 

vs.  Thomas  Williams,  judgment  for  de- 
fendant,   343 

Arms,  &c.,  stock  of  powder  to  be  purchased  b)' 
surveyor  and  Captain  Humphrey 
Atherton, 3 

surveyor  not  authorized  to  sell  any  ord- 
nance, &c., 5 

order  concerning  providing,  by  towns,  to 

be  sent  to  towns  by  secretary,    ...      6 

of  towns,  persons  removing  not  entitled  to 

a  share  in, 35 

Captain  Keayne  and  others  to  pay  for  guns 

borrowed, 47 

notice  to  be  given  to  notary  public  of  pow- 
der, &c.,  imported, 57 

Surveyor  General  John  Johnson  granted 

five  pounds  per  annum, 74 

towns   to  have   carriages,   &c.,  made   for 

ordnance, 105 

petition  of  Boston  concerning  annual  choice 

of  surveyor  of, 146 

Miles  Tearne  to  make  drum  heads,  .     .     .149 

order  concerning  sale  of  povrder, ....  195 

towns  having  ordnance  to  mount  the  same,  222 

surveyor  to  make  annual  report  of  stock  on 

hand, 2.'>S 

surveyor  to  buy  powder, 281 

powder  to  be  provided  by  county  Treas- 
urer,     366 

new   surveyor    appointed ;    committee   to 

take  account  of  former, 391 

powder  to  be  purchased, 410 

three  commissioners  to  officiate  in  place  of 

surveyor  general, 422 

wine  duties  to  be  expended  for  powder,     .  423 

inquiry  to  be  made  as  to  powder  on  hand,  4-iO 
Arnold,  Benedict, 332 

Stephen, 333 

William,     .     .14,15,17,46,332,333,356,411 
and    others,    residing    in    Patuxet   and 

Shawamet,  letters  to, 16 

to  be  written  to  concerning  Shaworaet,  .     34 
petition  concerning  jurisdiction  over  Pa- 
tuxet,   149 

and  others,  petition  to  be  free  from  au- 
thority of  JNIassachusetts,  ...         .  333 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


40 


>i 


Arson  made  felony, 83 

Artillery  company,  day  of  meeting  in  Boston 

changed,  1650, 5 

Ashurst,  Henry, 456 

and   others,  committee  on    Harvard  Col- 
lege,     362 

Aspinwall,  William, 66 — 68,118 

and  E.  Bendall,  to  give  in  account  on  oath, 

concerning  the  ship  Planter,  ....     44 
Thomas  Gayner  plaintiff  against,     ...     97 

Mr., 137 

Assabeth  River, 54 

land  located  on,  to  Hermond  Garrett,     .     .     43 
Assualt  and  battery,  see  Husband  and  wife. 

Astwood,  James, 187 

deceased,   William    Parks,    administrator, 

authorized  to  sell  estate  of,     ....  188 

order  concerning  estate  of, 215 

John, 167,  169,  172 

Atherton,   Humphrey,  20,  43—45,  89,  98,   110,  135, 

141,  144,  154,  183.  188,  200,  203,  204,  215, 

21V,  218,  219,  225,  245,  247,  277,  396.  409, 

436,  445.  448. 

chosen  Assistant,  181,  221,  254,  285,  320,  364, 

416 
substitute  for  commissioner  of  United  Col- 
onies,   255,  364,  416 

deputy, 2,  37,  120 

speaker, 120 

to  buy  powder, 3 

commissioner    to     Plymouth    concerning 

Shawamet, 15 

return  of, 16 

five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .     .     19 
and  soldiers,  paid  for  services  to  Narra- 

gansett, 35 

major  for  Suflolk,  in  the  absence  of  Major 

Gibbons, 107 

allowed  to  keep  his   sheep  on   Martin's 

Vineyard,  or  Nantucket, 199 

land  located  for, 332 

authorized  to  establish  Courts  for  Indians,  334 
is  desired  to  locate  land  elsewhere  than 

on  Connecticut  River, 380 

land  granted  to, 400 

joined  with  the  magistrates  for  Hampton 

Court, 404 

to  keep  the  County  Court  at    Hampton,  406, 

425 

Major,  254,  260,   270,  305,  327,  334,  343,  354, 

362,  395,  424,  428 

Atkinson,  Theodore, 73^  236 

Attachment  to  continue  till  execution  be  satis- 
fied,      26,  27 

Attachments,  see  Actions  at  law. 

Aubrey,  William, 99^  238 


Aubrey,  Mr., 

Auditor,  committee  appointed  to  examine  ac- 
count of, 

and  Treasurer,  committee  to  take  accounts 

of, 

clerk  of  the  House  of  Deputies  to  account 

with, 

petition    of     Boston    concerning     annual 

choice  of, 

and  Treasurer,  annual  accounts  of,  to  be 

published, 

committee  appointed  on  accounts  of, 
to  continue  in  oflice  till  Court  of  Election 

ne.\t,  1656, 

office  of,  to  cease,  and  duties  transferred  to 

Treasurer, 

Augur,  Arthur,  Jun., 

Aurania,  Fort,  plantation  near, 

Austin,  Samuel, 

Avery,  Christopher, 

Awerey,  Christopher,  answer  to  petition  of  .     . 

Babb,  Philip, 124, 

constable  for  Island  of  Shoals,  .... 
Bacon,   Nathaniel,  commissioner   on   Harvard 

College, 

Badcock,  George, 

Baker,  John, 160,  164, 

Jeputy, 

of  Ipswich,  to  be  paid  by  Treasurer,     .     . 

Nathaniel,  vs.  Hingliam, 

Thomas, 

Baker's  Pond, 

Bakers,  penalty  for  light  weight  of  bread,    .     . 

Ball,  Richard, 

Banckes,  Richard, 

Banishment,  law  concerning,  suspended,  &c.,  . 
Barbadoes,   Bermuda,  Antigua,   and    Virginia, 

trade  with  forbidden, 

trade  permitted  to,  under  conditions,  .  . 
Barber,  George,  eldest  sergeant  at  Medfield,  . 
Barker,   Francis,  of  Concord,  deceased,   order 

to  sell  house  of, 253 

Richard, 139,  ]4o 

George, l  «•> 

forbidden  to  preach  at  Saco,      ....   li;:! 

Barney,  Jacob,  deputy, 1 1  j 

Barren,  John, 191,198,337 

Sergeant, 191 

Barrett,  John,  Sen., 158 

John.  Jun., 158 

Bartlett,  John,  fine  for  want  of  weights,  &c.,  re- 
mitted,      11 

Robert, 227 

of  Northampton, 271 

BaHl.o'imew,  Henry, 29,  42,  423,  427 

deputy  for  Salem,  .  .  2,  37,' 77,  181,  32(>,  416 


244 


89 

113 

146 

152 
151 

284 

318 
358 
438 
158 
210 
210 
136 
127 

362 

342 

165 

2 

31 

M 

66 

138 

79 

163 

129 

433 


40 

57 

111 


468 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Bartholmew,   Henry,  and  William,  money  ad- 
vanced by,  for  expenses  of  commis- 
sioners of  the  United  Colonies,  ...     20 
William,     .     .     .     .20,249,267,283,292,317 

deputy  for  Ipswich, 2 

surety  for  John  Gifford,  &c.,  .     .     .    242,  243 

Bartrum,  John, 207 

Cascom,  Thomas,  commissioner  at  Nonotucke,  227 
Baslom,   [Bascom],  Thomas,  commissioner  at 

Northampton, 271 

Bassatt,  William,  petition  concerning  forfeited 

peas  denied, 10 

Basse,  Samuel, 401 

deputy, 182,  286,  365 

answer  to  petition  of, 377 

Deacon, 231 

Batchiler,  Mary,  petition  of, 282 

Mr., 316 

Messrs.  Colcord  and  Sanborn,  agents  for,  .     67 

Goody, 354 

Bate,  Anne, 293 

Edward,  deputy, 449 

Bateman,  John, 99 

Bates,  James, 446 

Batsons,  Stephen, 1*54 

Batt.  Christopher, 32,  208 

deputy, 2,  416,  449 

commissioner  for  Norfolk  Court,  ....     18 

vs.  the  town  of  Salisbury, 174 

Mr., 174 

Batten,  Hugh, 227,  228 

Batter,  Edmund, 224,  230,  247 

deputy, 221,  449 

Bayly,  Jonas, 358 

Mary, 124 

Theophilus, 243,  244 

Beales,  John,  deputy, 364 

Beames,  Andrew, 358 

Beamis,  Joseph, 238 

Beck,  Alexander,  petition,  of, 349 

Beoket,  John,  and  others,  petition  of,   .     .     .    .174 

Becks,  Becx,  John, 330 

and  company,  of  the  iron  works,  John  Gif- 
ford plaintiff  against,     .     .    188,  241—244 
John  Gifford  released  from  prison  on  pe- 
tition of, 268 

Beef,  pork,  fish,  &c.,  casks  for,  to  be  of  full 

gauge, 105 

oath  to  packers  of, 105 

importation  of,  forbidden, 246 

inspection  of,  see  Inspection. 
Beer  not  to  be  sold  above  twopence  per  quart,  151 

See  Brewers. 
Belcher,  Belehar,  Andrew,      .     .  353,  370,  376,  405 
Edward,  his  claim  disallowed,      ....  332 
Gregory,  petition  of, 398 


Belcher,   Gregory,  and  others,  petition  of,  for 

new  plantation, 445 

Jeremiah, 352 

three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  378 

Bell,  Thomas,  executioner, 146 

BelUngham,  Richard,  20,  35,  44,  45,  85,  119,  135, 
188,  195,  200,  217,  218,  221,  245,  254,  277, 
281,  285,  320,  364,  415,  416,  448. 
Deputy  Governor,  119,  221,  254,  285,  320,  364, 

416 
substitute  for  commissioner  of  the  United 

Colonies, 1,37,77,119,285 

Governor, 181 

Assistant, 1,  36,  76 

commissioner  for  Norfolk  Court,  ....     18 
to  hold  the  Court  at  Strawberry  Bank,  .     .     90 

to  hold  Norfolk  County  Court, 94 

to  hold  the  Court  at  Dover, 95 

to  hold  the  County  Court  at  York  and  Kit- 

tery, 132 

chairman  of  the  committee  to  reduce  gov- 
ernment expenses, 135 

and  others,  a  committee  to  revise  laws  of 

the  session, 149 

commissioners  sent  to  Maine,  report  of,  157 
associate  in  York  County  Court,  ....  224 
one  fourth  of  Block  Island  granted  to,  .  .  356 
and  town  of  Salem,  difference  between,    .  375 

Mr., 10,  66,  112,  177 

ten  shillings  paid  to  servants  of,    .     :     .     56 

Bendall,  Edward, 44,  67 

Bennet,  Bemet,  Bemett,  George,      .     .     .    282,  336 

Henry, 423 

John, 327 

Samuel, 302.  374 

surety  for  John  Gifford,  &c.,      .     .     .    242,  243 

answer  to  petition  of, 302 

petition  of, 423 

William, 423,  427 

Bent.  Peter,  petition  of, 173 

Bermuda,  trade  with,  forbidden,  &o.,   .     .     .40,  57 

Bernard,  Hannah, 412 

Berry,  Ambrose, 435 

Berstow,  Michael,  deputy, 120 

Betts,  John, 145,147 

Bible,   penalty   for    denying,   see     Scriptures, 
Holy. 

Billerica,  established  as  a  town, 237 

grant  of  land  to,  for  Cambridge,   .     .    268,  269 
grant  of  eight  thousand  acres  of  land  lo- 
cated for, 302 

bridge  at.  to  be  finished, 307 

and  Andover  line, 333 

brandmark  for, 339 

Bing,  Anthony, .  174 

Births,  see  Registration. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


4G9 


Bishop,  John, 215 

Bitlield,  Samuel;  rs.  Archibald  Henderson, .     .111 

Black  Point, 312,  338,  359 

Blaino,  John, 244 

Blanton,  William,  answer  to  petition  of,  .     .     .     97 
petition  of,  concerning  Indians,    ....  174 

Blasedall,  widow, 211 

Blasphemy,  committee  appointed  to  draw  up 

law  against, 218 

Blind  Hole,  woodland  near,  granted  to  Govern- 
or Endicott, 65 

Block  Island  granted  to  Governor  Endicott  and 

others, 356 

Blood,  James,  deputy, 449 

John, 237 

land  granted  to  Mr.  Haugh  laid  out  for,  230 

Robert, 237 

Sergeant, 18 

Blue  Point, 312,  359 

Boade,  Henry, 158 — 160 

Boats  or  other  vessels  not  to  be  sold  to  Indians,  277 

Boden,  Ambrose,  Sen., 358 

Ambrose, 358 

Bogerstow,  iarm  laid  out  to  Rev.  John  Allen  at,  174 

Boiden,  Thomas, 31 

Boles,  John,  ensign  at  Roxbury, 173 

See  Bowles. 

Bond,  Nicholas, 129 

Thomas,  answer  to  petition  of.      ....  328 
Bonighton,  Boniton,  Bonython,  John,  299,  358,  396 

warrant  for  arrest  of, 264 

proclamation  against, 343 

return  of  committee  on  petition  of,     .     .     .  435 
Book,    entitled   the   Meritorious    Price  of  our 
Redemption,  Justification,  &c.,  writ- 
ten by  William  Pinchon,  orders  con- 
cerning,   •  .     .     .     .  29,  48,  49 

of  Records  of  House  of  Deputies  to  be  per- 
fected,       33 

written  by  Rev.  John  Norton  in  answer  to 

Mr.  Pinchon  to  be  printed,     ....     72 

for  recording  letters  kept, 73 

of  records,  old,  to  be  transcribed  by  the 

secretary, 180 

Books  of  John  Reeves  and  Lodowick  Muggle- 

ton,  order  concerning, 199 

of  Reeves  and  Muggleton  to  be  burned,     .  204 
Quakers',  order  against  importation  of,  .     .  278 

Booth,  Robert, 162,  214,  233,  421 

deputy, 365 

commissioner  and  selectman  at  Saco,  162,  163 

authorized  to  preach  at  Saco, 163 

Boreman,  Thomas,  answer  to  petition  of,    .     .  299 
Boston,  3,  5,  9,  19,  87,   105,   112,   121,  183,  195,  198, 
240,  280,  312,  313,  332,  369,  383,  405,  412, 
418,  437,  441. 


Boston,  deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255, 
286,  320,  364,  416,  449 
answer  to  petition  of  inhabitants  of,  .  .  .  9 
petition  of  women  of,  for  Mrs.  Tilley,  .  .  2-1 
granted  powder  to  salute  ships,  .  .  .  35,  36 
authorized  to  choose  a  new  clerk  of  the 

writs, 44 

Court  of  Commissioners  appointed  to  hear 

minor  cases,  civil  and  criminal,      .     .     61 
Water  Works   Company  incorporated   in 

Conduit  Street, 99 

officers  of,  their  rank  established,     .     .     .106 

County  Court  at,  deferred, 108 

new  church  in,  advised  not  to  settle  Mr. 

Powell, 113 

south  company  of,  choice  of  John  Leverett 
by,  disapproved,  he  being  now  cap- 
tain of  cavalry,     114 

commissioners  to  be  chosen  by  inhabitants 

of, 115 

church,  Rev.  Mr.  Norton  settled  over,    .     .132 
authorized  to  control  survey  of  lumber  in 

its  limits, 145 

answer    to    petition     concerning    powder 

house,  choice  of  auditor,  surveyor,  &c.,  146 
answer  to  petition  of  the  new  church  con- 
cerning ordaining  Mr.  Powell,    .     .     .  177 
new  church,  Mr.  Reyner  recommended  to, 
by  the   General  Court  for  settlement 

as  pastor, 210 

new  church,  answer  to  petition  of,     .     .     .212 
selectmen  to  fix  wages  of  porter-s,      .     .     .  222 
and  Ipswich  churches,  council  to  be  called 
in  relation  to  Mr.  Norton's  removal  to 

Boston, 225 

County  Court  adjourned, 244 

seniority  of  military  officers, 246 

and  Lynn  boundaries,  order  concerning,    .  298 
town  house,  for  what  purposes  to  be  used,  327 

tax  abated, 327 

farms  and  Ro.xbury,  road  laid  out,     .     .     .  327 
commissioners,  decision  concerning  juris- 
diction of, 351 

commissioners  of, 353 

petition  of,  to  be  a  corporation,      ....  368 
commissioners    and    selectmen    to    have 

charge  of  inns,  &c., 418 

selectmen    to   order   the   improvement   of 

common  lands,     .  419 

free  school,  one  thousand   acres  of  land 

granted  to  aid, 444 

Court  of  Commissioners  at,  see  Court. 
Boswell.  Isaac,  vs.  John  Cheny,  on  appeal,  174,  208 

Bo.sworth,  Benjamin, 332 

Boulter,  Nathaniel, 188,  420 

rs.  Robert  Lord, .     .         .     .  ■ 215 


470 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Boulter,     Nathaniel,     Robert     LoiJ     plaintiff 

against,  in  review, 228,  229 

Boundary  line   of  patent,   north,   three   miles 
north  of  Merrimac  River,  at  its  most 

northerly  part, 93 

north,  commissioners  appointed  to  survey 

and  report. 98 

pay  of  commissioners  on  survey  of,  .  .109 
return  of  commissioners  for  survey  of,  .  109 
answer  of  Mr.  Cleve  in  relation  to,  .  .175 
commissioners  appointed   to   mark  the 

limit  of,  on  the  sea  coast, 178 

observation  by  Clark  and  Andrews  re- 
turned and  sworn  to, 207 

resolution  concerning, 312 

south,  committee  appointed  to  survey,  .     .  424 

Bounty,  Roger, 207 

Bourne,  Garret,  petition  of  Kibby  concerning 

estate  of, 232 

Bowers,  Bowiers,  Benanuell, 93 

George,  judgment  against,  for  tearing  a  deed,  93 

fined  for  illegal  voting, 93 

five  pounds  of  fine  of,  remitted,     ....  113 

Bowles,  Joseph, 158 

clerk  of  the  writs  for  Wells, 160 

See  Boles. 

Bowling  at  inns  forbidden, 20 

Boyce,  Boyes,  Boies,  Matthew,  .     .     .     5,118,248 

deputy, 2 

Brackett,  Brachett,  Peter, 445 

deputy, 120,255,321,416,449 

appointed  to  marry  at  Braintree,  ....  383 

Richard, 230,  401 

deputy, 222 

Thomas, 369 

Bradbury,  Thomas,  42,  50,  73,  96,  97,  118,  134,  175, 
178,  194,  211,  283,  286,  301,  340,  403,  •425 
deputy,  ....'...    37,  77,  255,  286,  416 
on  committee    concerning    commissioners 

of  Boston,  &c., 97 

appointed  special  commissioner,  ....  288 

Bradford,  William, 17 

Governor  of  Plymouth,  letter  from,  con- 
cerning Shawomet, 34 

Mr., 141 

Bradstreet,  Simon,  42,  122—131,  194,  196,  200,  217, 

224,  225,  245,  277,  298,  448 

chosen  Assistant,  1,  36,  76,  119,  181,  221,  254, 

285,  320,  364,  416 

commissioner  for  United  Colonies,  1,   36,   77, 

119,  181,  221,  254,  285,  320,  364,  416 

land  located  on  petition  of, H 

Major  Daniel  Denison  and  Captain  Wil- 
liam Hawthorne  commissioners  to  ac- 
cept Kittery.  &c.,  under  the  govern- 
ment of  Massachusetts 70 


Bradstreet,  Simon,  and  others,  commissioners 

to  Kittery, 73 

land  granted  to, 75 

and  others,  commissioners  to  Kittery, 
Maine,   commission  and   instructions 

to, 109 

and  Captain  Thomas  Wiggin,  committee 
appointed   to   lay   out   one   thousand 

acres  of  land  for, 147,  177 

and  others,  for  executors  of  will  of  Thom- 
as Dudley,  deceased,  answer  to  peti- 
tion of, 178 

five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,   .     .  180 

land  laid  out  to, 211 

committee  appointed  to  locate  land  for,     .  270 
answer  to  petition  of,  concerning  location 

of  land, 303 

petition  concerning  location  of  land,      .     .  332 

Mr.  Stoddard  plaintiff  against, 375 

is  desired  to  locate  land  elsewhere  than  on 

Connecticut  River, 380 

land  located  for, 394 

guardian  of  Anna  Keayne,  Jun.,   ....  395 

land  granted  to, 420 

Blr., 271,  304,  362,  443 

Braintree,  .     .     .     183,  225,  313,  351,  377,  383,  398 

deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,  182,  222,  255,  286, 

321,  365,  416,  449 

petition  for  bridge. 231 

fine  of  constable  abated, '    .  £99 

petition  of,  concerning  paupers,    ....  376 

vs.  Andrews  and  Phippeny, 401 

tax  abated, 424 

petition  for  a  new  plantation,    .     .     .    376,  445 

Bragdon,  Arthur, 129 

Brance,  Michael. 123 

Brancen,  George,  .    » 129 

Brattle,  Thomas,  and  wife,  petition  of,     .     .     .  272 
JNIr.,  and  others,  vs.  John  Coggan,     .     .     .281 
Bread,  see  Bakers. 
Breck,  Breckc,  Edward,     ....      139,  232,  248 

Breedon,  Captain,  petition  of, 342 

Brend,  William, 371 

Brenton,  Martha,  allowed  to  keep  two  English 

children, 113 

Mr.,  licensed  fur  trader, 354 

Brewers,  regulations   concerning  beer,  as   to 

quality,  price,  &c., 59 

Bridecake,  Mr., 47 

Bridge,  John, 33,117,239 

Bridges,  see  Highways  and  bridges. 

upon  county  highways,  see  County. 

Bridges,  Robert, 188,  200,  217,  245 

chosen  Assistaiit,     1,  36,  76,  119,  181,  221,  254 
petition  concerning  Mr.  Woodcock's   ac- 
count,   215 


(JENJaiAL   INDEX. 


471 


Bridiiefi,  Robert,  granted  salary, 319 

Bridiimaii,  James,  constable  at  Nortliamptoii,  .  372 

Brijrdeii,  Mildred, 377 

Tliomas,  petition  of,  conccriiiiig  estate  of 

Miehael  Carthrieke, 377 

Uriggs,  George, 132 

Brighaui,  Sebastian, 5 

deputy, 2 

Thomas,  deceased,  order  concerning  es- 
tate of, 260 

Brocke,  John, 208,  229 

Brooke,  Brookes,  Thomas,  Sen.,  of  Concord,     .  201 

deputy, 364,  416,  449 

commissioner  at  Concord, 89 

and  partners,  fur  traders, 354 

Broughton,  I'homas, 86,  236 

Mr., 247 

Browne,  Broune.  Abraham, 312 

Edmund, 276 

land  granted  to, 214 

and  others,  petition  of, 228 

of  Sudbury, 274 

minister  at  Sudbury,  land  located  for,     .  329 

Franci.s,  and  wife,  petition  of, 282 

John, 167,  169,  172 

Richard, 43,  188 

deputy, 2,  37,  77,  181,  221 

land  located  for,  near  Medfield,     ...       7 

Thomas, 46,  317,  318 

William, 276,  374 

deputy, 181,  364 

Mr., ■  •  11,  233,  412 

Browning,  Brownning,  Thomas, 398 

Bruers,  Francis, 207 

Buck,  Lydia, 293 

Buflam,  Joshua, 349,  367 

Bulkely,  Buckley,  Mr., 90,  -280 

Buncker,  George, 272 

Bnrch,  Colonel  John,  vs.  Samuel  Maverick,  for 

Noddle's  Island, 132 

Burning  of  houses,  hayricks,  &c.,  see  Arson. 

Burrage,  John, 296 

Bur.sly.  John, 123 

Burt.  Edward, 272,  334 

patent  granted  to,  for  making  salt,  ...  91 
two  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .  .  283 
vs.  George   Munnings;   judgment  of  the 

County  Court  reversed, 65 

Henry, 314 

Bury,  Ambrose, 164 

Bu.sby,  Mr., 381 

Bush,  John, 158 

Buswell,  William, 157 

Kutten,  John, 68 

Buttles,  Leonard, 99 

answer  to  petition  of, 97,  98 


Calkin,  Caulkin,  Hugh,  deputy,  .     .     .     .    2,  37,  54 
e.vcused  from  further  attendance, ....     33 

dismissed, 54 

Call,  Thomas, 236 

Cambridge,   12,  90,  96,  183,  225,  306,  308,  317,  375, 

376 
deputies,  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286,  321, 

364,  416,  449 

church, 228 

and   Shawshin,  settlement  between,  as  to 

land  titles,  taxes,  &c., 238 

inhabitants  of,  and  some  farmers,  case  be- 
tween, postponed, 248 

grant  of  land  to  Billerica  for,    .     .     .    268,  269 
case  concerning  inhabitants  south  of  river 

postponed,  &c., 284 

committee  concerning  estate  of,  continued,  291 
report  of  committee  concerning  dilhculty 

in, 319 

one  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to,  to 

aid  a  grammar  school, 399 

platform,  see  Church  discipline. 

Cannidge,  Matthew, 318 

Canny,  Thomas, 147,177,211 

Capen,  Joane,  widow,  fine  for  not  proving  a  will 

remitted, 116 

Cape  Porpus,     .     .     .      157,  160,  161,  175,  214,  375 
establishment  of  government  at;  made  a 

town,  &c., 164 

and  Saco,  division  line, 399 

and  Wells,  committee's  return  of  boundary 

line  of, 425 

Carby,  William, 139 

Cards  and  dice,  use  of,  prohibited, 366 

Carpenter,  William, 15,  46,  332,  333 

Carr,  George, 231 

Ram  Island  granted  to, 248 

to  be  free  from  taxes,  &c.. 439 

Carrington,  Edward 70 

answer  to  petition  of,  concerning  Maiden 

fine, 421 

Cart  Creek, 139 

Carter,  Anne,  answer  to  petition  of,     ....  421 

John, 407 

Joseph, 176,  404 

Mary,  answer  to  petition  of, 176 

Richard,  vs.  Mr.  Saunders,  order  concern- 
ing action, 51 

Samuel, 176,  272,  404 

Thomas, 176,  404 

Ensign, 373 

Carthrick,  Michael, 377 

Caruithen,  Dickery, 175 

Cary,  James,  clerk  of  the  writs  for  Charles- 
town,  5 

Casco  Bay. 312,  33S 


472 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Casco  Bay,  Black  Point,  Blue  Point,  and  Spur- 
wink,  included  in  Massachusetts  by 

commissioners, 357 

Casmore,  Richard, 332 

Cassell,  Gregory, 318 

Castle  Island  Fort,  commander  of,  to  notify 
ships  of  the  laws  concerning  stran- 
gers,     24 

captain  of,  to  hoist  English  colors,    ...     41 
allowance  to  commander  of,  for  arms,  &c., 

furnished, 50 

committee  appointed  on  repairs  of,  &c.,  89,  110, 

149,  154,  353 
and    battery,   two    hundred    and    twenty 

pounds  granted  for  repair  of,       .     .     .  149 

committee  for  repairing, 149 

soldiers  of  the  twelve  next  towns  to 
Boston  to  work  upon  in  lieu  of  train- 
ing,      183 

salary  granted  to  the  gunner  of,    .     .     .     .192 
captain  to  send  out  boats  to  look  for  ex- 
pected friendly  ships, 193 

order  concerning  signal  of  alarm  from,      .  1 93 
constables  to  collect  tax  on  soldiers  for,     .  202 
committee  appointed  to  contract  with  cap- 
tain of, 204 

Captain  Davenport  to  be  paid, 205 

marshal  to  collect  arrears  of  tax  for,      .     .  247 
captain  of,  continued  in  office,      ....  247 

committee  on  finishing,  &c., 260 

new  commission  to  captain  of,      ....  260 

expense  of  repairs  of,  to  be  paid,      .     .     .  403 

Catta  Island,  granted  to  Governor  Endicott,      .  240 

Cattle,  law  concerning  impounding,  &c.,      .     .  290 

Cavalry,  encouragement  to  enlistment  of,     .     .     80 

officers,  commission  of, 108 

rank  of  captain  of, 183 

to  pay  for  their  ferriage, 323 

See  Military  affairs. 
Census  of  males  to  be  returned  by  constables,  223 
Chadborne,  Chadborn,  Chadbourne,  Humphrey,  124 

deputy, 286,  365,  417 

excused  from  attendance, 293 

William, 124 

Chadwick,  Charles,  deputy, 286,  364 

Challis,  Chalice,  Philip,      ....      215,  279,  429 
chosen  lieutenant  at  Salisbury,     ....  342 

Chamberlyn,  William, 240 

Champernoone,  Captain, 265 

Champney,  Champnie,  John, 33 

Richard, 239 

authorized  to  sell  estate  of  John  Champ- 
nie, &c., 33 

Chandler,  John, 3:i2 

Chapin,  Henry, 3.T(i 

Samuel, 1 36,  213,  214,  379 


Chapin,  Samuel,  commissioner  for  Springfield,  115, 

379 

Deacon, 368 

Chaplin,  Hugh, 296 

Charles  II.,  address  of  the  General  Court  to,    .  449 
Charlestown,  19,  87,  90,  105,  146,  183,  195,  198,  225, 

306,  307,  348 

deputies  of,   2,  37,  77,   120,   181,  221,  255,  286, 

320,  364,  416,  449 

clerk  of  the  writs, 5 

granted  powder  to  salute  ships,  ....  36 
arrears  of  taxes  remitted  to  inhabitants  of, 

on  account  of  loss  by  fire,     ....     51 
tvro  Courts  for  Middlesex  to  be  held  at,     .  102 

Court  days  changed, 186 

powder  delivered  to  Captain  Norton  for,  .  193 
selectmen  to  fix  wages  of  porters,     .     .     .  222 

commissioners  appointed  for, 249 

County  Court  at,  adjourned, 260 

ferry,  regulations  concerning, 296 

powder  granted  to,  delivered, 327 

and    Maiden,   order   concerning  disputed 

claims  between, 349 

one  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to,  to 

aid  a  grammar  school, 399 

and  Thomas   Gold,   case  between,  about 

bounds,  &c., 406 

order  concerning  trial  of  case  between,  425 

school,  land  located  for, 444 

Charlett,  Katherine, 74 

Nicholas, 7'4 

Chasmore,  resolutions   concerning   rescue   of, 

at  Pawtuxet, 300 

Chattocke,  Charles, 47 

Chauncey,  Chancy,  Charles,  president  of  Har- 
vard College,   granted   five   hundred 

acres  of  land, 237 

thirty  pounds  granted  to, 237 

is  desired  to  preach  the  election  sermon,  .  254 
granted  five  hundred  acres  of  land,  .  .  .  296 
five  hundred  acres  of  land  to  be  located  for,     74 

land  located  for, 405 

order   concerning   farm   of,   at  Marlboro', 

&c.,      .    ' 424 

Mr., 280 

overseers  of  Harvard  College  to  provide 

a  house  for, 216 

Cheater,  Alice, 193 

Cheekly,  John 373 

Cheesbrooke,  William,  commissioner  for  South- 
er Town, 353 

See  Cheseborough, 

Chelmsford. 307,  337,  382 

established  as  a  town, 237 

petition  of  inhabitants  of,  and  John  Eliot, 

concerning  enlargement  of  grant  to,  .  268 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


473 


Chelmsford,  petition  of  inhabitants  of,  for  re- 
mission of  fines, 293 

bridire,  order  concerning  repair  of,    .     .     .  374 
and  Indians,  exchange  of  land  between,  .  430 

Cheny,  Daniel, 215 

John, 174 

case  of,  deferred, 190 

and  Isaac  Boswell,  settlement  of   suit 

between, 208 

William, 66 

Chesbrough,  Cheseborough,  William,      .     .     .  344 
See  Cheesbrooke. 

Chestly,  Philip, 245 

Child,  Ephraim,  188,  264,  284,  317,  320,  353,  363, 

373,  380,  397,  406,  408,  445 

deputy,  .  2,  77,  181,  221,  255,  286,  364,  416,  449 

Doctor, 65 

Chickering,  Francis,  deputy, 120 

Henry,  deputy, 37 

deputy,  &o.,  excused  from  attendance,  .     75 
authorized  to  marry  at  Dedham  in  ab- 
sence of  Mr.  Lusher, 407 

Christmas,  penalty  for  keeping, 366 

Church  Discipline,  Book  of,  commended  anew 
to    the    churches,    for    their    report 

thereon, 22 

objections    to,   to    be    answered    by   the 

elders, 54,  55 

approved, 57 

Church  purposes,  decision  as  to  power  of  towns 

to  bind  inhabitants  to  pay  taxes  for,  310, 

311 
members  of,  in  good  standing  only,  to  be 

admitted  as  freemen, 420 

Churches,  to  approbate  preachers, 328 

Clapboard  Island, 207 

Clapp,  Edward, 446 

John, 446 

Nicholas, 446 

Roger,  Lieutenant,  97,  148,  188.  247,  252,  327, 

362,  404,  409,  424,  445 

deputy,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286,  364,  416, 

449 


deed  from  administrator  and  widow  of 

Mahalaleel  Munnings, 445 

Clarke,  Edward, 163 

John,  patent  granted  to,  for  invention  for 

saving  firewood, 104 

patent  for  saving  firewood  extended,     .  260 

Jonas, 178,  207 

Thomas,  38,  42,  51,  55,  85,  86,  89,   106,   110, 

116,  154,  188,  195,  204,  218,  219,  224,  260, 

319,  349,  356,  369,  374,  395,  396,  436. 

deputy,    .  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286,  320 

forfeiture  of  moose  skins  remitted,     .     .      9 

VOL.    IV. PART  I.  60 


Clarke,  Thomas,  commissioner  for  Boston,  115,  313, 

353,  410 
associate     for    Yorkshire     and     Dover 

Courts, 268 

three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  304 
committee  appointed  to  locate  land  for, .  339 

vs.  Richard  Hutchinson, 362 

vs.  Captain  John  Pearse, 405 

allowed  to  come  in  as  creditor  of  Mr. 

Selleck's  estate, 410 

Captain, 249,  281 

Cleave,  Cleaves,  George, 358,  436 

petition  of,  concerning  north  line  of  !Mas- 

sachusetts  patent,  and  answer  thereto,  175 

answer  to  remonstrance  of, 250 

protest  from, 312 

commissioner  for  Falmouth  and  Scarbor- 
ough Court, 360 

and  others,  answer  to  petition  of,  .     .     .     .  396 
return  of  committee  on  petition  of,   .     .     .  435 

Mr., 306 

Clements,  John, 310 

deputy, 182 

commissioner  at  Haverhill, 6 

Robert, 42,  97,  247 

commissioner  for  Norfolk  Court,    ...     18 
authorized  to  give   oath  of  fidelity  at 

Haverhill, 19 

deputy, 2,  37,  77,  120 

William,  petition  of, 259 

petition  of,  referred, 269 

Mr.,  associate  in  Norfolk  Court,  .  .  .  .180 
Clerk  of  Court  not  to  be  marshal  also,  .  .  .183 
Clerk  of  the  writs,  fees  of,  for  attachments, .  .  421 
Clerk  of  the  House  of  Deputies,  see  Deputies. 
Clerks  of  Courts,  fees  of,  established, ....  287 
Clerks  of  the  writs,  to  register  births,  &c.,    .     .  290 

Clifton,  Hope, 410 

Cloth,  committee   appointed   on  making   and 

dressing, 380 

Clothing,  scarcity  of, 198 

order  concerning  spinning,  &c.,  on  account 

of  deficiency  of, 256 


land  granted  to, iil£>Coale,  Robert, 17 


Cobbet,  Mr., 280,  310 

Cobbett,  Thoma.s, 393 

administrator  of  William  Skipper,    ...     34 

overseer  of  Harvard  College, 204 

Cochitchawake  Brook, 112 

Coddington,  William, 190 

Codogan,  Rice, 129 

Coffin,  Coflyn,  Peter, 279 

Tristram, 211,  302,  341 

Coggan,  .lohn, 68,  318,  378 

and  William  Parks,  petition  of,  concern- 
ing estate  of  John  Woodey,   ...        133 


474 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Coggan,  John,  heirs  of  William  Tyng  plaintiffs 

against, 281 

and  wife,  special  committee  appointed  on 

petition  of, 304 

and    Martha,    petition    concerning    land 

granted  to  Thomas  Coytemore,  .     .     .  272 

Martha, 272 

answer  to  petition  of, 337 

petition  of, 378 

authorized  to  sell  real  estate, 396 

Sarah, 147 

Coin  of  silver  estahlished,  (1 2d.,  6d.,  3d.,)    .     .     84 

change  in  device  on, 104 

approval  of  former  order  establishing  the 

mint  for, 118 

of  Massachusetts,  not  to  be  exported.    .     .197 
committee  appointed  to  search  passengers 

and  vessels  for, 198 

Coitmore,  Thomas, 176 

Colcord,  Ann,  wife  of  Edward,  answer  to  her 

petition, 236 

Edward, 67,  194,  210,  236,  271 

attorney  for  Thomas  Williams,      .     .     .  318 
petition  of,  concerning  Wall  and  Rucke,  340 

and  Wall's  case,  decided, 350 

Colcord's  case,  witnesses  in,  to  be  paid,  .    245,  273 

Cole,  Anna, 444 

formerly  wife   of    Captain    Keayne,   five 

hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,     .410 

land  located  for, 443 

Elizabeth, 64 

petitioner  concerning  her  case ;    Court 

answers  as  before, 8 

being  sick,  twenty  pounds  granted  to,    .     33 
bill  for  medical  attendance  on,  to  be  paid,     50 

John, 164 

Nicholas, 158 

Samuel, 69,  425 

of  Boston,  land  granted  to,  for  stock  ad- 
ventured,       147 

administrator  of  Edmund  Grosse, .     .     .  295 

order  concerning  grant  to, 337 

land  located  for, 402 

William, 158 

Mr., 402 

Mrs., 89,  392 

Colebron,  William,  land  granted  to,     ...     .  336 

land  located  for, 441 

Coleby,  Anthony, 429 

Coles,  Robert. 46 

Collins,  CoUens,  Christopher, 75 

part  of  forfeited  bond  remitted,     ....     55 

Edward,    .  11,  224,  225,  270,  273,  286,  291,  369 

deputy,  181,  221,  255,  286,  321,  364,  416,  449 

notified  concerning  his  absences,    .     .  306 

Mr., 247 


Collins, , 76 

Collicott,  Collecott,  Richard,  land  granted  to,   .  406 

Mr,, 231,  411 

Collier,  William, 17 

Colonies  of  New  England,  confederate,  see 
United  Colonies  of  New  England. 

Colton,  George, 319 

Commerce,  see  Trade. 

Commissioners  of  small  causes,  authorized  to 

administer  oaths  to  witnesses,  &c.,  .  103 
to  be  hereafter  approved  by  County  Courts,  202 
authorized  to  perform  marriage  ceremony,  255 

powers  of,  limited,  &c., 287 

law  concerning, 322 

special,  appointed, 287 

Common,  of  pasture,  timber,  &c.,  order  con- 
cerning rights  in, 417 

Commonwealth,  Edward  Rawson  appointed  at- 
torney to  commence  an  action  in  be- 
half of, 294 

Concord, 53,201,307,308,311 

deputies  of,   2,  37,  77,  120,  181,   221,  255,  286, 
321,  364,  416,  449 
and  Watertown,  bounds  settled,    ....     54 
and  Woburn,  petition  of  inhabitants  of,  for 

new  plantation  on  Merrimac  River,  .  136 
petition  of  inhabitants  of,  concerning  grant 

of  land, 210 

five  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to  in- 
habitants of, 237 

petition  concerning  iron  works,     .     .     .     .311 
bridges,  committee  appointed  concerning 

repairs  of, 404 

Iron  Works,  answer  to  petition  concerning 

digging  for  ore, 429 

Confederation  of  New  England  colonies,  see 

United  Colonies  of  New  England. 
Conference  of  elders  at  Boston,  on  request  of 

the  General  Court  of  Connecticut,  .     .  280 
Coney,  Hopestill,  sold  in  Virginia,  to  be  re- 
turned to  Boston, 428 

Conihasset  meadows,  committee  appointed,  to 

be  joined  by  Plymouth,  to  divide,  .     .  285 
See  Plymouth. 
Connecticut,  customs  on  goods  from,  through 
Massachusetts,    abolished    condition- 
ally,     11 

letter  sent  to, 199 

letter  to,  concerning  title  to  Pequot  lands,  315 
letter  from,  referred  to  commissioners  of 

the  United  Colonies, 328 

Constable,  duty  of,  set  forth  at  length,  &c.,  324,  327 
penalty  for   not    accepting   office   of,   in- 
creased,   121 

decision  concerning  fine  for  non-accept- 
ance of  office  of 138 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


475 


Constables  tn  rplvim  names  of  deputies  elected,  203 
to  settle  their  accounts  of  taxes  each  May,  247 
to  collect  taxes  on  warrant  from  selectmen,  308 

to  act  as  coroners, 326 

Constables' watches,  regulation  of,  .  .  .  .83,103 
under  the  direction  of  selectmen,      .     .     .  293 

Converse,  Edward,  deputy, 417,  449 

James, 431 

Conveyances    to   be   recorded   in   the   county 

where  the  lands  are, 22 

order  concerning  words  to  pass  an  estate 

of  inheritance,  &c., 39 

of  lands,  &c.,  to  be  by  deed  acknowledged 

and  recorded, 101 

fees  for  recording, 287 

law  concerning  record  of, 288 

Cooke,  Joseph, 74 

Samuel, 117 

Rachel, 12 

Lieutenant  Richard, 318 

Thomas, 12 

Lieutenant, 395 

Cooley,  Benjamin, 319 

Coolige,  Coolage,  John, 214 

deputy, 320 

Simon, 447 

Cooper,  John, 9,  260 

Josiah,  petition  of, 448 

Thomas, 314 

Timothy, 235 

selectman  of  Groton, 235 

Coopers,  penalty  for  defective  work  by,  .  .  .  40 
order  concerning  casks  for  beef,  &c.,     .     .  105 

Corbyn,  Robert, 358 

Corlett,  Elijah, 282,  396,  397 

schoolmaster,  land  granted  to, 397. 

committee  appointed  to  lay  out  farm  of,     .  404 
Corn,  paid  for  taxes,  loss  by  shrinking  of,  to  be 

borne  by  towns, 214 

order  concerning  measuring  of,     ...     .  222 

importation  of,  forbidden, 245 

law  fixing  price  of,  repealed,  except  for 

taxes, 322 

prices  of,  26,  63,  106.  205,  220,  245,  279,  309,  434 
Comelison,  Menen,  petition  concerning  settle- 
ment of  Captain  Howsen's  estate,  .     .114 
vs.  Robert  Knight  and  others,  administra- 
tors of  Captain  Howsen, 137 

Coroners'  inquests  to  be  conducted  by  consta- 
bles,     326 

Correspondence,  foreign,  see  Letters. 

Corwin,  George, 187,  374,  395 

Cotteriirs  Delight, 266 

Cotton,  Mr.  John,  deceased,  Rev.  John  Norton 

successor  to, 132 

William, 99 


Cotton,  Mr., 25,  34,  48,  55 

Coudrey,  William,  appointed  to  marry  at  Read- 
ing,       382 

Couland,  Alice, 410 

Coultson,  Christopher, 429 

Counties  directed  to  establish  houses  of  correc- 
tion,      222 

expenses  to  be  paid  by  county  Treasurers.  185 
deficit  to  be  met  by  county  tax,  ....  185 
Treasurers  to  be  chosen  by  the  people,  .  185 
bridges  in  country  highways  to  be  at  the 

charge  of, 231 

Court  of  Commissioners  established  in  Boston,     61 

fees  for  entry  of  actions  in, 104 

order  concerning  actions  triable  before,     .  105 
Court  of  Assistants,  jurors  for,  to  be  chosen  in 

Sutlblk  and  Middlesex, 60 

Edward  Mitchelson,  marshal,  to  execute 

judgments  of, 146 

Court,  County,  for  SufTolk,  impowered  to  give 
just  damages  in  a  case,  the  verdict 

being  unusual, 145 

for  Suffolk,  change  in  days  of  holding,  .     .      5 

at  Boston,  adjourned, 352 

adjourned, 384 

Court,  General,  order  concerning  the  transmis- 
sion of  bills  and  orders  between  the 

houses, 3 

majority  of  either  house  means  majority  of 

those  present, 35 

negative  vote ;  cases  in  dispute  between 
houses  decided  by  majority  of  whole 

Court, 82 

Mitchelson,  marshal,  to  execute  judgments 

of, 146 

acts  of  each  session  to  be  printed,  .  .  .182 
order  concerning  entry  of  petitions,  .  .  .  183 
causes   tried  in,  to   be  by  stated   cases; 

names  of  parties  to  be  omitted,  .     .     .184 
day  fixed  for  trial  of  causes  in  which  Court 

and  jury  did  not  agree, 186 

certain  civil  oases  assigned  for  trial,  .  .  227 
decision  as  to  legality  of  October  session, 

1655, 243 

bills,  &c.,  to  be  read  on  three  several  days,  292 
vindication  of  its  course  against  Quakers,  .  384 

—390 
fines  for  absences,  see  Deputies,  Magis- 
trates. 

Courteous,  Thomas, 129 

Courts,  County,  two  associates  for,  to  be  chosen 

by  freemen  of  each  shire, .     .     .     .    27,  28 
expenses  of  judges,  jurors,  &c.,  to  be  paid 

by  fees  for  entry,  &c.,  of  actions,     .     .  154 
clerks  to  keep  record  of  fines,  &c.,  due,  and 

of  expenses,  &c.,  of  officers,  ....  184 


476 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Courts,  expenses   of,   to    be   paid    by   county 

Treasurer, 185 

fines  to  be  collected  by  marshal  and  paid 

to  county  Treasurer, 184 

to  have  charge  of  support  of  ministers,  .     .314 
to   appoint   commissioners    to    solemnize 

marriage, 322 

cases  from,  to  be  carried  to  Assistants,  not 

to  the  General  Court, 381 

Courts,  inferior,  actions  transferred  from,  to  be 

by  certified  copies, 280 

established  for  preliminary  examinations 

in  criminal  cases,  &c., 287 

Courts,  special,  cost  of  jurors  to  be  paid  by  party 

for  whom  they  are  convened,  ...  3 
special,  order  concerning  juries  for,  ...  60 
special,  established  for   Scarborough  and 

Falmouth, 359 

for  Indians, 334 

order  concerning  juries  in, 81 

order  concerning  written  evidences,  &c.,  .     85 
law  authorizing  omission  of  juries  in  trials 

repealed, 107 

committee  appointed  on  reduction  of  e.\- 

penses  of, 135 

offices  of  marshal  and  clerk  not  to  be  in 

the  same  person, 183 

order   concerning    duties   and   powers   of 

juries,  &c., 290,  291 

to  be  held  in  Boston  town  house, ....  327 
Courts,  minor,  see  Commissioners  of  small  causes. 
Cowdrey,  Coudrey,  William,  ....  42,  201,  307 

deputy, 37,  120,  321 

Cowell,  Edward,  land  granted  to, 403 

land  laid  out  for, 437 

Cowes,  Henry, 207 

Cowman,  Richard, 162 

Coytmore,  Coytemore,  Thomas, 281 

Mr., 272 

Cradoclce,  Matthew, 31 

Rebekah,  alias  Whichcott,  widow  of  Mat- 
thew Cradock,  deceased,  petition  of,  .     31 

Crainewell,  Richard, 332 

Crane,  Mr., 352 

Criminal  proceedings,  person  summoned  or 
presented  to  be  proceeded  against  as 
for  contempt,  for  non-appearance,  .     .       4 

statute  of  limitations  in, 81 

order  concerning  counties  to  which  fines 

are  payable, 3'23 

duties  of  constable  in, 324 

decision  concerning  appeals  in,    .     .     .     .351 

cost  of  hue  and  cry  regulated, 418 

Croad,  John, 421 

Crocket,  Thomas, 129 

Croe,  John, 240 


Cromwell,  John, 251,  295,  302 

Right  Honorable    Oliver,    Lord,    General, 

&c.,  letter  to, 72 

Lord,  General,  &c.,  letter  to  be  sent  to,  .  110 

Lord  Protector, 355 

Lord  Protector,  &c.,  letter  received  from,  195 
committee  to  prepare  an  answer  to,  196,  197 
Lord  Protector,  letter  written  to,     .     .     .  215 

Seaborne, 295 

Crosby,  Simon,  deceased,  order  concerning  es- 
tate of, 65 

Grossman,  John, 73 

Crosts,  Griffith,  lieutenant  at  Ro.xbury,     .     .     .173 
Croune,  Colonel  William,  answer   to   petition 

of, 440 

Cudwortli,  James, 17 

Cullicke,  John, 167,169,172,368 

Captain,    and  William    Goodwine,   grant, 

for  settlement,  to, 328 

Culver,  Goodman, 344 

Cunly,  Abraham, 124,  125 

Curtis,  Henry, 276 

Cutter,  Richard,  petition  of, 396 

Cutts,  John,  petitioner  against  Sampson  Lane, 

order  concerning, 46 

Cuttshamakin,  authorized  to  buy  shot,     ...     54 

Dancing  at  inns  forbidden, 40 

Dane,  John, 192 

Daniell,  John, 64 

Danforth,   Danford,  Jonathan,  240,  302,   398—400, 
402,  404,  430,  437,  442,  443,  444 

Samuel, 12,  43,  178 

Thomas,  96,  117,  187,  189,  217,  228,  243,  260, 
264,  268—270,  272,  275,  282,  295,  296, 
305,  307,  317,  319,  333,  338,  344,  350,  35], 
353,  355,  357,  363,  370,  373,  376,  397,  409, 
415,  428,  432,  437,  448. 

deputy, 286,  321 

chosen  Assistant, 364,  416 

Treasurer  of  Harvard  College,  ....     13 
recorder  for  sales  of  land,  &c.,  in  Mid- 
dlesex,      90 

petition   of,   concerning    deed  torn   by 

George  Bowier, 93 

deed  to,  from  Indians  confirmed,  .  .  .  190 
and  Robert  Hale  commissioners  to  lay 

out  Mrs.  Nowell's  farm,  &c., ....  295 
in  behalf  of  the  children,  of  Josse  Glover 

vs.  Henry  Dunster, 305 

three   hundred   acres    of    land   granted 

to, 34.5 

to  keep  Yorkshire  Court, 3.S1 

land  granted  to, 441 

Mr.,  ...      7,  12,  235,  263,  395,  401,  403,  4;iii 

Dastin,  Josiah, 237 

Davenport,  Richard, 112,3  12 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


477 


Davenport,  Richard,  allowance  to,  for  arms,  &c., 

provided  in  the  Castle, 50 

one  of  the  guardians  of  Adam  Winthrop,  .  116 

line  remitted, ll'? 

petition  of,  concerning  powder  used  at  the 

funeral  of  Governor  Dudley, .     .     .     .  180 
committee   appointed   to   engage,  for  the 

Castle 204 

account  to  be  audited  and  paid,    ....  205 
granted  five  hundred  acres  of  land,  .     .     .314 

repaid  money  advanced, 343 

farm  laid  out  for, 372 

to  be  paid  for  repairs  of  Castle,     ....  403 
Thomas,  sale  of  land  to,  by  Mary  Glover, 

confirmed, 369 

Captain, 260,  375,  376 

Davies,  Davis,  Daniel, 124 

Thomas,  commissioner  at  Haverhill,     .     .       6 

William, 118,175,270 

deputy, '77 

inspector  of  leather, 93 

lieutenant  of  Suffolk  cavalry,  .     .     .     .107 

Dolor, 235 

George, 1''"'' 

James,  deputy, 449 

John, 128,  129,  261 

innkeeper  at  York, 130 

Mar)',  child  of,  to  be  maintained  by  Water- 
town,  262 

Nicholas, 128,  129 

constable  of  York, 130 

Tobias,  constable  of  Ro.vbury,      ....  332 
Captain  WilUam,     .     .     .     .207,217,369,436 

land  granted  to, 375 

land  located  for, 443 

Lieutenant, 191 

Davison,  Nicholas, 86 

petition   of,  in   behalf  of    Mrs.    Rebecca 

Cradock, 31 

petition  in  behalf  of   Dr.  Whichcott  and 

wife, 297 

Mr., 137 

Day,  Stephen,  grant  of  three  hundred  acres  of 

land  to,  confirmed, 236 

granted  three  hundred  acres  of  land,     .     .  306 

land  located  for, 333 

Deaths,  see  Registration. 

Debts,  to  be  paid  according  to  contract,  .     .     .  197 
Dedham,  3,  183,  187,  201,  225,  314,  383;  396,  407, 

408—410,  428 
deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,   181,  221,  255,  286, 

364,  416,  449 

village,  called  Medfield, 7 

committee  appointed  concerning  locating 

land  for  Natick  Indians  in,    ....     75 
grant  of  land  to,  &c., 75 


Dedham  and  Rehobolh,  bridge  between,     .     .     98 

a  gun  lent  to, 138 

petition  of,  referred  to  special  committee, .  148 
answer  to  petition  of  inhabitants  of, .     .     .  234 
Deeds,  see  Conveyances. 

Dell,  Abigail,  widow, 248 

George,  deceased,  order  concerning  estate 

of, 248 

Denison,  Dennison,  Daniel,  34,  70,  73,  109,  141,  144, 
157,  178,  182,  192,  196,  214,  245,  247,  277, 
298,302,  441,  448. 
chosen  Assistant,   119,  181,  221,  254,  285,  320, 

364,  416 
substitute  for  commissioner  of  the  United 

Colonies, 37,  181,  3'..0 

comnlissioner  of  the  United  Colonies,  221,  254, 

285,  364,  416 
chosen  major  general,  221,  254,  285,  364,  416 

deputy, 37,  77 

speaker  for  the  session, 77 

grant  of  land  located, 64 

major  general,  in  the  absence  of  Major 

General  Sedgwick, 107 

secretary  pro  tern., 150 

expedition  of,  to  Piscataqua,  rewarded,      .  165 

associate  in  Norfolk  Court, 180 

committee  appointed  to  locate  land  to,  .  188 
granted  land  on  Connecticut  River,  .  .  .  303 
answer  to  petition  of,  concerning  location 

of  land, 314 

appointed  to  revise  and  codify  the  laws,  .  337 
order  concerning  location  of  grant  for,  .  .  355 
one  fourth  of  Block  Island  granted  to,  .  .  356 
order  concerning  location  of  farm  for,  .  .  376 
is  desired  to  locate  land  elsewhere  than  on 

Connecticut  River, 380 

grant  of  land  located  for, 394 

guardian  of  Anna  Keayne,  Jun.,  ....  395 
order  concerning  land  on  Meirimac  River,  410 
three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .  420 
further  reservation  of  land  for,  ....  424 
six  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,    .     .  437 

Edward, 97 

deputy 77,  221 

Georiie,  314,  333—335,  338,  340,  344,  350,  357 
and  others,  answer  to  petition  of,  .  .  .315 
selectman  and  commissioner  at  Souther 

Town, 353 

land  granted  to, 411 

William, 64 

Dennell,  Thomas, 129 

Deputies   returned   from    the   several    towns, 
names  of,  2,  37,  77,  119,  181,  221,  255, 
286,  320,  364,  416,  449. 
towns  having  thirty  freemen  or  less  at  lib- 
erty to  send  or  not,     .  • 154 


478 


GENEKAL   INDEX. 


Deputies,  expenses  of,  to  be  paid  by  towns,     .  154 

absent,  to  be  fined, 203 

constables  to  return  annual  lists  of,  .     .     .  203 

to  be  orthodox, 206 

Deputy  Governors,   names   of:    Richard    Bel- 

lingham,   119,  221,  254,  285,  320,  364,  416 

Thomas  Dudley, 36,  76 

John  Endicott, 1,  181 

Destauriers,  Monsieur,  fine  of  fifty  pounds  re- 
mitted one  half,    11 

Dexter,  Richard, 177 

and  Job  Lane,  petition  concerning  forfeited 

bund, 249 

Diamont,  John, 124 

Dice,  see  Cards. 

Dickins,  Nathaniel, 16 

Dickison,  John,  constable  of  Salisbury,  .     .     .343 
Dier,  Thomas,  and  Sampson  Shoare,  judgment 

in  case  between, 436 

See  Dyer. 

Dimock,  Democke,  Thomas, 17 

Discipline,  see  Church  discipline. 

Divan,  John, 281 

Dixon,  William, 129 

Doeskin  Hill, 329 

Domner,  Stephen, 10 

See  Dumraer. 
Donations  to  the  colony,  committee  appointed  to 

receive,  &c., 223 

Donell,  Henry, 129 

Dorchester,  .     .     .     .    3,  19,  138,  183,  201,  225,  446 
deputies  of,  2,   37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286, 
320,  364,  416,  449 
case    concerning    Tompson's    Island,    at- 
tachment granted  against  for  Tomp- 

son, 21 

petition  of  inhabitants  of,  for  Mrs.  Tilley, .  24 
vs.  Tompson,  concerning  island,  judgment 

for  defendant, 33 

fine  remitted,       .     .     .     • 98 

authorized  to  sell  a  great  gun,  &c.,  .  .  .  279 
one  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to,  to 

aid  in  school  fund, 397 

Dordin,  Josias, 178 

Douse,  Lawrence, 295 

Dover, 201,249,302,350 

deputies  of,   2,  37,  77,  120,  182,  222,   255,  321, 

365,  416,  449 

Court  at, 95,  147 

order  concerning  County  Courts  at,  .  .  .  132 
associates  in  the  County  Courts  at,  .  .  .133 
fined  for  not  sending  a  deputy,  ....  67 
authorized  to  send   two  deputies   to   the 

General  Court, 108 

and   Exeter,   commissioners   appointed  to 

settle  boundaries, 118 


Dover,  north  line  of,  established, 118 

Lieutenant  William  Pomfret  authorized  to 

marry  at, 188 

Court,  associates  appointed  for,     ....  268 

Dow,  Dowe,  Henry,  deputy, 221;  255 

petition  of, 236 

Downing,  Dennis, 124 

Emanuel,  grant  located  for,  near  Hamp- 
ton, by  commissioners, 49 

committee  appointed  to  locate  farm  for,     .  178 

Mr., 44 

Drunkenness,  decision  as  to  repetition  of  of- 
fence,  84 

among  Indians,  order  to  prevent,  .     .     .    -.201 
law  against,    .     .     ....     .     ...     .  203 

Drew,  Robert,  petition  concerning  wine  duty,  .  282 

Duck  Pond, .     .     .     .     .     .435 

Dudley,  John, 178 

Samuel,      ........*...  262 

Thomas, .   20,  25,  44—46 

Governor, 1 

Deputy  Governor, 36,  76 

Assistant, 119 

executor  of  the  will  of  Isaac  Johnson,  7 

order  concerning  location  of  grant  to,     .     76 
commissioners  appointed  to  lay  out  the 

farm  granted  to, 117 

deceased,  order  concerning  tax  on  es- 
tate of, 174 

petition  of  executors  of  will  of,  concern- 
ing sale  of  estate,  &c., 178 

powder  granted  for  funeral  of,  .     .     .     .180 

Dummer,  Richard, 440 

attorney  of  Thomas  Nelson, 12 

declared  attorney  for  Thomas  Nelson,  .     .     36 

land  granted  to, 272 

land  located  for, 399 

land  in  Watertown  confirmed  to,  .     .     .     .  408 
Shubael,  proposed  as  minister  of  Salisbury 

new  town, 429 

Mr.,  associate  in  Norfolk  Court,    .     .     .     .180 
See  Domner. 

Duncan,  Nathaniel, 394 

auditor  general, 10,  69,  86 

commissioner  for  Boston,  .     .  62,  115,  313,  353 

land  granted  to, 439 

Peter, 394 

Dunstan,  Thomas,  constable  for  Kittery, .     .     .  126 

Dunster,  Henry, 74,  116,  239 

first  president  of  Harvard  College,   ...     12 
petition  of,  for  charter  for  Harvard  College,     12 

—14 
petition  of,  for  Harvard  College ;  granted 

one  hundred  pounds  and  ferry  rent,    .     30 
guardian,    petition    concerning    estate   of 
Josse  Glover,  &c., 118 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


479 


Dunster,  Henry,  president  of  Harvard  College, 

resignation  of, 196 

accounts  of,  as  to  estate  of  Josse  Glover, 

deceased,  order  concerning:,   ....  214 
and  Thomas  Danforth,  ease  between,  re- 
ferred to  a  committee, 305 

accounts  of,  with  the  colony,  referred,  .     .  305 

Mr., 176,  196,  313 

recompensed, 312 

Durston,  Thomas, 124 

Dutch,  not  to  trade  with  Indians   in  limits  of 

Massachusetts, 21 

and  French,  sale  of  provisions  to,  forbid- 
den,      120 

consultation  with   commissioners   of  the 
United   Colonies   concerning  wrongs 

by, 141 

committee  appointed  to  advise  with   the 

commissioners  concerninpr,    .     .     .     .141 
Captain  Jacobson's  bark  forfeited  for  trad- 
ing with, 189 

five  hundred  men  to   be   raised  to  serve 

against  the, 195 

law  prohibiting  trade  with,  repealed.     .     .197 

ship  Prophet  Samuel, 229 

governor,  ansvi^er  to  letter  of, 251 

letter  to,   concerning  claim    on    Hudson 

River, 395 

letters,  Simon  Lynde  translator  of,    .     .     .  424 

letter  to  be  sent  to, 445 

Button,  Thomas, 373.  407 

Dyer,  Mary, 383—390,  419 

Thomas, 231 

deputy,  ....     2,  120,  181.  255,  321,  416 
See  Dier. 
Eames,  Anthony,  claim  of,  for  survey  of  Plym- 
outh line  to  be  audited, 380 

Easton,  Nicholas,  letter  from,  concerning  Shaw- 

omet, 34 

Eastow,  William, 178 

Eaton,  Samuel, 13 

Theophilus, 167,  169,  172 

Mr., 141 

of  New  Haven, 112 

Governor  of  New  Haven,  debt  due  to,  to 

be  paid, 56 

Ebedmelech,  petition  of  Job  Lane  in  behalf 

of, 137 

Edgcomb,  Nicholas, 358 

Edge,  Robert, 129 

Edsall;  Thomas,  petition  concerning  fine   for 

illegal  voting, 147 

Edwards,  Nathaniel,  will  of  NalVianiel   Smith 

presented  by, 71.  72 

deceased,  order  concerning  estate  of,     .     .  235 
Elbridge,  Thomas,  answer  to  petition  of, .     .     .     44 


Eldred,  Sergeant, 392 

Elections,  constables  to  warn  freemen  for,  .     .  326 
EUethrop,  Elethrop,  Elthrop,  Abigail,  and  ex- 
ecutors of  her  late  husband,  case  be- 
tween,       212 

Thomas,  deceased,  settlement  of  estate  of,  193 

widow, 193 

Eliot,  Jacob, 332 

John, 210,  431,  432 

released  from  a  fine  payable  by  an  In- 
dian,     41      / 

petition  concerning  Indian  settlements, .  192     '^' 
petition  concerning  location  of  lands  for 

Natick  Indians,  &c.,      ....     362,  363    " 

John,  Sen., 430,  432 

John,  Jun., 432 

Margery,    petition    concerning    estate    of 

Samuel  Sherman, 92 

Philip,  deputy, 181,  221,  255,  286 

Mr.  [John], 11,409 

township  for  the  Indians  laid  out  on  pe- 
tition of, 137 

petition  concerning  land  for  Natick  In- 
dians in  Dedham, 75 

petition  of,  concerning  Indian  grant  at 

Chelmsford, 268 

petition  of,  in  behalf  of  the  Indians,  .     .  317 

Ellingham,  William, 129 

Mr., 281 

Ell  Pond, 176 

Elmer,  Edward,  commissioner  at  Nonotucke,   .  227 
commissioner  at  Northampton,      ....  271 

Els,  John, 333 

Elson,  John, 163 

Elzay,  Arnold,  petition  of,  ........     91 

Emerson,  Joseph, ....  158 

Emery,  Emory,  Anthony, 124,  407 

James, ....   124 

John, 215,  341 

petition  of,  concerning  sale  of  land,    .     .     66 

John,  Sen.  and  Jun., 362 

Endicott,  John,   109,   115,   147,  200,  245,  247,  277, 

448,  453,  454 
Governor,  36,  76,   119,  221,  254,  285,  320,  364, 

416 

Deputy  Governor, 1,  181 

commissioner  for  the  United  Colonies,  .     .  320 
substitute  for  commissioner  of  the  United 

Colonies,  ....  1,77,119,181,285 
granted  one  hundred  marks,  with  thanks,  4 
three  hundred  acres  of  woodland  granted 

to,  on  condition,  &c., 65 

Catta  Island  granted  to, 240 

committee    appointed   to   lay   out   former 

grant  to, 260 

committee  appointed  to  locate  gran  for,    .  305 


480 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


EnJicott,  John,    one   llioiisand   acres   of  land 

granted  to, 304 

house  rent  of,  to  be  paid, 309 

coiiiinitlee  to  locate  land  for,  continued,  .  334 
one  fourth  of  Block  Island  irranted  to,  .  .  356 
five  hundred  and  fifty  acres  of  land  laid 

out  for, 373 

order  concerning  location  of  farm  on  Ips- 
wich River, 437 

John,   Jun.,   four   hundred   acres  of   land 

granted  to,  &c., 427 

land  located  for, 444 

Eires,  i?inion,  and  others,  petition  of,   ...     .  228 
Engersol,  John,  and  others,  petitioners  for  an 

island, 404 

En.iiine  to  cut  grass,  invented  by  Joseph  Jenks,  233 

England, 108,  114 

Ireland,  and  Scotland, 52 

letter  from  government  of.  by  Mr.  Winslow,  72 
reply  ordered  to  be  sent  to  Parliament  and 

to  Oliver  Cromwell, 72 

sent  1o,  for  help  for  Harvard  College,  .  .  91 
letters   to  be  sent   to  Parliament   and   to 

Oliver  Cromwell, 110 

letter  received  from  the  Lord  Protector  of, 

concerning  war  against  the  Dutch.     .  195 
committee  appointed  to  answer,     .     196,  197 
case  of  Thomas  Kemble  and  Thomas  Jen- 
ner  vs.  John   Pearce  referred   to   the 

Lord  Protector  of, 249 

letter  to  be  sent  to  the  Lord  Protector  of,  .  251 
answer  to  letter  from  the  Lord  Protector  of, 

concerning  settlement  at  Jamaica,      .  273 
answer  sent  to  letter  from  the  Lord  Protect- 
or of,   343 

address  to  Charles  II.,  King  of,     ...     .  449 

address  to  the  Parliament  of,    .     .     .     449,  453 

instructions  to  commissioner  to,    ...     .  455 

English  colors  to  be  advanced  upon  the  Castle,     41 

Epp.s,  Daniel, 192,  330 

Erroneous  preaching,  &c.,  law  to  prevent,    .     .  151 

Essex  county, 201,  247,  280 

Court,  time  of  holding,  changed,  ....     41 

regiment  to  be  mustered, 224 

Estates,  conveyances  of,  see  Conveyances, 
in  Suffolk,  may  be  settled,  by  permit  of  two 
magistrates,  by  e.xecutor  or  adminis- 
trator,   101,  102 

Evered,  Andrew, 129 

John, 399 

land  granted  to, 375 

Everell,  Ezekiel, 295 

James, 9^ 

Everett,  William, 124 

E.xecutioner,  Thomas  Bell,  exempt  from  watch- 
ing,       146 


Executions,  levy  of,  see  Actions  at  law. 

E.xeter, 350 

order  concerning  choice  of  a  constable  in,     10 

and   Dover,   commissioners   appointed   to 

settle  boundaries, 118 

Fairebancks,  Jonas, 342,  372 

Fairfield,  Daniel, 91,  283 

Elizabeth, 91 

Falls  River, 139 

Falmouth, 350,  436 

deputy  of, 417 

established  as  a  town,  &c.,  formerly  Spur- 

winck,  Casco  Bay.  &c.,     .     .     .  359 — 361 

limits  of, 380 

and  Scarborough,  line  settled, 399 

Fanning,  Thomas, 398 

Faringtous,  Edmund, 95 

Farley,  George, 240 

Farnani,  John, 177 

Farueham,  Henry,  vs.  Lawrence  Douse,  .     .     .  295 
Fast  appointed,      .     .     .52,  108,  195,  276,  347,  367 

on  account  of  condition  of  England,  .     .     .  417 
Fawer,  Fower,  Barnabas,  division  of  estate  of,  259 

settlement  of  estate  of, 283 

Eleazar, 283 

Grace, 259,  283 

Faxon,  Thomas, 145 

Felcher,  William, 431 

See  Fletcher. 

Fellew,  Abraham, '  .  358 

Fellowes,  Richard,  land  granted  to,      ....  319 

land  located, 356 

Samuel, 157 

Fences,  selectmen  authorized  to  regulate,    .     .  153 

Fenn,  Captain  Robert, 227,  228 

Fernald,  Reynold,  associate, 115 

Ferriage  of  magistrates,  order  concerning,  &c.,  253, 

433 
Ferry,  Charlestown,  regulations  concerning,     .  296 

Field,  William, 16 

Finances,  committee  appointed  to  reduce  ex- 
penses of  government, 135 

order  concerning  annual  statement  for  the 

benefit  of  the  country, 151 

Fines,  in  the  General  Court,  secretary  to  give  a 

list  of,  to  the  auditor, 185 

in  counties,  clerk  of  the  County  Court  to 
give  list  of,  to  Treasurer, 18 

payable  to  the  county  &c., 323 

Fish,  regulations   concerning  curing   and   in- 
spection of, 80 

oath  to  inspector  of, 80 

inspection  of,  see  Inspection. 

packing  of,  see  Beef. 
Fisher,  Anthony,  confirmation  of  land  to,      .     .117 

petition  for  abatement  of  fine, 187 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


481 


Fislier,  Daniel,  deputy, 321,449 

Joshua,  54,  298,  314,  342,  355,  399,  404,  426,  438 

deputy, 120,  321 

licensed, 351 

Lieutenant,  32,  264,  268,  270,  337,  342,  362,  380, 

441 
Fishermen,  certain,  exempt  from  training,    .     .312 
Fi.ske,  David,  and  Sarah  Wilson,  William  Hub- 
bard authorized  to  marry, 244 

Phineas,  deputy, 120 

William,  deputy, 2,  77 

Fitch,  Zachariah,  and  others,  petition  concern- 
ing highway, 237 

Fitts,  Zachary, 178 

Five  JVlile  Pond, 138,  139 

Fleming,  John,  petition  of  his  guardians  con- 
cerning division  of  estate, 372 

Fletcher,  Joseph, 215 

impressed  as  a  soldier,  but  discharged  on 

petition, 133 

Fletcher,  Felcher,  William, 237,  432 

Mr.,  Jun.,  minister  of  Wells, 426 

forbidden  to  preach  at  Wells, 434 

See  Felcher. 
Flint,  Flynt,  Thomas,  chosen  Assistant,  1,  36,  76,  119 
Mr.,  magistrate,  deceased,  widow  exempt 

from  taxes, 247 

Foley,  Thomas, 268 

Foote,  Joshua, 281,311 

deceased,  petition  of  administrator  concern- 
ing .sale  of  land, 262 

Mrs.,  and  heirs  of  Nathaniel  Rogers,  case 

between,  concerning  dower,  ....  352 
Foorde,  Thomas,  vs.  Captain  John  Wall,  .  .  66 
Fornication,   committee    appointed    to    frame 

law  against, 218 

Forsditch,  Stephen,  part  of  forfeiture  remitted  ; 

son  enjoined  to  appear, 32 

Foster,  Hopestill, 415 

deputy, 77,  120,  236,  364,  416,  449 

Fewer,  see  Fawer. 

Fox,  Thomas, 260 

Foxwell,  Richard, 358,  396 

answer  of  committee   on  petition  of,  &c.,  43.'>, 

436 

Mr., 425 

Francis,  John, 376 

Francklin,  William, 56 

Freathy,  William, 129 

Freemen,  decision  of  the  General  Court  as  to 

duties  of, 335 

returned   from   Connecticut,   not   required 

again  to  take  the  oath  of, 406 

qualifications  of, 420 

French,  Dutch,  &c.,  not  to  trade  with  Indians 

in  Massachusetts, 21 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  61 


French,  &c.,  sale  of  provisions  to,  forbidden,   .  120 
in  the  eastern  parts.  Major  Gibbons  licensed 

to  trade  with, 157 

French,  William, 240 

deputy, 449 

Lieutenant,  appointed  to  marry  at  Biller- 

ica  and  Chelmsford, 382 

Frenchmen,  expense  of  diet  of  two,  to  be  paid 

for  by  the  Treasurer, 174 

Frizell,  John, 402,  424 

Frost,  Charles, 123,  124 

deputy, 321,  449 

Edmond,  and  others,  feoffees   in  trust  of 
Nathaniel  Sparhawk's  estate,     ...       9 

Nicholas, 124,  261,  341,  374 

Phoebe, 208 

Fry,  John,  ....  201 

Fuller,  John,  deputy,      .  221 

Robert,        .  ...  428 

Furbur,  William,  vs.  John  Garland,     ....  374 
Fur  trade,  return  of  committee  on  licenses  for,  354 
in  Acadia  and  Nova  Scotia  order  concern- 
ing,       355 

rent  of,  to  be  expended  in  powder,    .     .     .410 
Furs,  &c.,  not  to  be  bought  of  Indians,  but  by 

persons  authorized, 291 

Gafford,  Mr.,  of  Salem,  free  from  paying  for 

muskets, 73 

Gage,  John, 90,  192,  330 

Corporal, 134 

Gaile,  Hugh,  129 

Gainer,  Gayner,  Thoma.s,  petition  concerning 

case  of  sale  of  ship  Planter, ....     44 
cancelled  charter  party  of,  made  good  for 

purpose  of  review  of  his  action,     .     .     44 
petition  concerning  suit  against  Aspinwall 

and  Bendall, 67 

vs.  Thomas  Venner, 69 

vs.  William  Aspinwall, 97 

petition  concerning  his  former  case  with 

Mr.  Aspinwall, 137 

answer  to  petition  of, 276,  292 

Gallop,  John,     ...  ....      94,  315 

Mehitable, 32 

Gallows,  to  be  removed  and  set  up  iu  Boston, .       3 

Gaming,  law  against,  amended, 20 

law  to  prevent, 360 

Gardiner,  Nathaniel, 266,  267 

Peter, 332 

Mr., 149,  281 

Garland,  John, 374 

Garnesey,  William, 129 

Garrett,  Harmon, 140 

Hermond,  committee  appointed  to  locate 

land  mortgaged  to, 43 

James, 114 


482 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Garrett,  Mr., 137 

Gates,  Stephen,  constable,  answer  to  petition 

of, 313 

Gatlifl'e,  Thomas, 261 

Gangers,   appointed   inspectors,    &c.,  see   In- 
spection. 

Gechalls,  Samuel, 215 

Gedney,  John,  order  concerning  payment  for 

wine  license  at  Salem, 10 

George,  the  Indian,  at  Lynn,  referred  to  infe- 
rior Court, 52 

Richard, 312 

Gerrish,  William,  deputy,  ....     2,  37,  77,  120 

commissioner  at  Newbury, 14 

captain  at  Newbury, 47 

captain  of  cavalry,  authorized  to  drill  in- 
fantry,       107 

appointed  special  commissioner,  ....  288 
•     petition    concerning    estate   of   Elizabeth 

Lowle, 348 

Captain, 194,  249,  286 

not  to  belong  both  to  cavalry  and  infan- 
try at  Newbury, 341 

Gibbons,  Gibbins,  Gibbens,  Ambrose,      .     .     .  298 
Edward,      .     .    67,  106,  107,  154,  183,  203,  204 

chosen  Assistant, 1,  36 

chosen  major  general, 1 

to  be  paid  for  military  services  by  the 

United  Colonies,       8 

settlement  of  his  account  with  auditor, .  8 
allowed  to  trade  with  the  French,  &c.,  .  157 
deceased,  powder  granted  for  funeral  of,  242 

James, 162 

Jotham, 71 

Gibson,  Christopher, 177 

Gettings,  Gittings,  Giddings,  George,  223,  230,  282 
deputy,  ....      120,  181,  221,  364,  416,  449 

GifTord,  Gyfford,  John, 194,  195,  228 

vs.  John  Becks  and  Company,  of  the  Iron 

Works, 188 

and  Iron  Works,  order  concerning  case  be- 
tween,       216 

agent  of  Iron  Works, 217—220 

decision  on  a  point  in  Case  by  Iron  Works 

Company  vs.,   .     .  237 

trial  of  his  case,  &c., 241 — 244 

further  decisions  in  his  case,    .     .     .     251,  252 
bail  to  be  taken  of,  till  the  Court  of  Elec- 
tions,   254 

to  receive  his  books, 254 

released  from  prison, 268 

vs.  Thomas  Savage  and  others,     ....  330 
his  power  of   attorney  to   Major  William 

Hawthorne  judged  void, 352 

Gilbert,  Elizabeth,  deed  to  Charles  Gott,  con- 
firmed,      ...  345 


Gillum,  Gillliani,  Benjamin, 56 

to  be  paid  twelve  pounds  due  Governor 

Eaton, 112 

petition  of, 371 

Gleason,  Thomas,  petition  of, 398 

Gloucester, 91 

deputies  of, 2,  37,  77,  120 

fine  of,  remitted, 116,212 

Glover,  John, 42,45,119,135 

deputy, 2,  37 

chosen  Assistant, 76,  119 

John,  son  of  Josse  Glover, 118 

Josse, 215 

deceased,    petition    of    Henry   Dunster 

concerning  estate  of, 118 

suit  in  behalf  of  children  of,    ...     .  305 
Mary,  sale  of  land  by,  to  Thomas  Daven- 
port, confirmed, 369 

Nathaniel, 369 

Priscilla, 74 

Roger,   . 118 

Mr., 148,  149,  180,  327 

Goare,  Rhoda, 342 

Godfrey,  Edward, 129,  131 

vs.  the  town  of  York,  referred,      ....  208 
and  Nicholas   Shapleigh,  letters  to,  con- 
cerning Kittery, 73 

John,  vs.  Abraham  Whittacre, 374 

Abraham  Whittacre,  plaintiff  against,    .  408 
Mr.,  associate  for  York  County  Court,   ;     .  132 
Mr.,  and  town  of  York,  commissioners  con- 
tinued to  settle  dispute  between,    .     .  229 
Goffe,  Edward,      ....     117,239,296,307,327 

deputy, 2 

his  account  to  be  audited  and  paid,  .    191,  285 
deceased,   Samuel  Goffe  vs.  executors  of,  412 

—415 
Samuel,  case   of,  referred   to  Middlesex 

Court, 370 

vs.  executors  of  will  of  Edward  Goffe, 

deceased,     412 — 415 

Gold,  Goold,  Daniel, 410 

Thomas, 404,  406 

and  Charlestown,  order   concerning  case 

between, 425 

Zaccheus, 33,  407,  438 

petition  of,  concerning  location  of  the 

Governor's  farm, 426 

his  fine  remitted  on  account  of  loss  by 

fire, 426 

Goodman, 373 

Gooch,  John, 158 

selectman  at  Wells, 159 

Goodale,  Elizabeth,  order  concerning  estate  of,     92 

Goodenow,  Edmund,      .     .    2,  43,  53,  276,  329,  449 

deputy, 2,  449 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


483 


Goodenow,  Jane, 276 

Lieutenant, 54,112,189,248 

Goodwine,  Goodwyn,  William,  ....    328,  368 

Gookin,  Gooking,   Daniel,   11,  43 — 45,  74,  89,  148, 

178,  179,  188,  227,  277,  291,  304,  305,  313, 

445,  448. 

chosen  Assistant,  37,  76,  119,   181,  221,  254, 

285,  320,  364,  416 

deputy, 37 

chosen  speaker, 37 

and   S.  Danforth,  e.\ecutors,  petition  con- 
cerning estate  of   Rev.  Mr.   Sliepard, 

deceased, 43 

five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .     .  304 

land  to  be  located, 314 

location  of  grant  approved, 340 

appointed  to  keep  Norfolk  County  Courts,  430 

Captain, 260,  334,  335,  434 

Gorgeana, 128 

Gorges,  Sir  Ferdinando, 156 

Gorton,    Samuel,  matters   to   be   settled  with. 

company  of, 20 

Gott,  Charles, 345 

deputy, 182 

Gouch,  John, 129 

See  Gooch. 
Government,    committee   appointed   for   redu- 
cing expenses  of, 134 

Governor,  one  hundred  marks  granted  to,     .     .     46 
granted  fees  for  affixing  the  colony  seal,    .     58 

to  reside  in  or  near  Boston, 223 

present,  desired  to  remain  in   Boston   as 

much  as  possible, 223 

to  be  furnished  with  a  guard, 439 

Richard  Bellingham, 181 

Thomas  Dudley, 1 

John  Endicott,  36,  76,  119,  221,  254,  285,  320, 

364,  416 
salary  of,  see  Salaries. 
Governor's  farm,  committee  appointed  in  rela- 
tion to  former  location  of, 426 

Island,  adjudged  to  belong  to  Adam  Win- 

throp,  grandson  of  Governor  Winthrop,  1 1 6 
Gowing,  Robert,  fine  for  selling  a  gun  to  In- 
dians abated  one  half, 10,11 

Grammar  schools,  see  Cambridge  and  Charles- 
town. 
Grant,  Christopher,  vs.  Watertown,  committee 

appointed,  &c., 187 

Grants,  &c.,  of  the  General  Court,  to  be  read 

on  three  several  days  before  passage,  292 
(Jray.  John,  gunner  at  the  Castle,  twenty  pounds 

granted  to, 192 

Greene,  Jacob, 198,  214 

James, 236 

John, 124.  332,  350 


Greene,  John,  Jun., 33i 

Samuel, 431 

printer  at  Cambridge,  petition  of,  .     .     .  335 
three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted 

to, 319 

to  be  paid  for  printing  the  laws,      .     .  391 
William,  answer  to  petition  in  relation  to 

orphans  of, 404 

Greenehill,  William, 2G8 

Greenes,  the,  Mr.  Arnold  to  answer,  ....  356 
Greenleaf,  Edmund,  vs.  Nathaniel  Boultei, .     .  420 

Grely,  Andrew, 215 

Griffin,  Hugh, 53,  276 

Richard,  deputy, 37 

commissioner  at  Concord, 89 

Groate,  John, 276 

Groce,  Gross,  Grosse,  Clement,  licensed  to  sell 

beer, 207 

allowed  to  keep  an  inn, 343 

Edmund,  deceased,  division  of  estate  of,  .  231 
administrators  of,  authorized  to  sell  es- 
tate of, 295 

administrator's  accounts  to  be  audited, 

&c., 448 

Groome,  Henry, 64 

Nicholas, 64 

Groton, .     .      337,  411,  437 

established  as  a  town,  formerly  Petapawag,  235 

selectmen  appointed  for, 235 

free  from  taxes  for  three  years,      ....  263 
order  concerning  survey  of  limits  of,     .     .  263 

Grout,  John, 53 

Grout's  Head, 53 

Grover,  John, 423 

Gunn,  Daniel, 193,214 

Gunnison,  Gullison,  Hugh, 124,  303 

deputy, 1S2 

servants  of,  paid  for  attendance  on  Court,  .     21 
petition  concerning  duty  for  wine,     .     .     .  133 

licensed  innkeeper, ]27 

associate  in  the  Court  at  Kittery,  .     .     .     .127 

and  Nicholas  Shapleigh,  suit  between,      .  189 

Guppy,  John,  petition  for  abatement  of  fine,     .   1 35 

Guy,  Jane,  widow,  authorized  to  sell  land,  &c.,     63 

Nicholas,  deceased, 64 

Hadden,  Fermon,  answer  to  petition  of,  .  .  .  297 
Hadlocke,  Nathaniel,  of  Nashaway,  .  .  .  .139 
Haine,  Haime,  Heimes,  John,     ....    276,  329 

Josiah, 276 

Walter, 53,  248,  276 

deputy, 37 

and  others,  petition  of, 228 

Hale,  Robert.     .     .  282,  295,  305,  334,  353,  373,  438 

Thomas, 139,  162 

Sergeant, 117 

Hall,  Dorcas 190 


484 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Hall,  John, 190 

Samuel,  50,  55,  97,  247,  249,  263,  267,  283,  301, 

310 

deputy, 221 

petition  of, 236 

Mr., 249 

of  Salisbury, 133 

Hallis,  Samuel, 215 

Hally,  Thomas, 424 

Halsall,  Halsell,  Halsey,  George,  186,  272,  380,  401 

Joane, 272,  380,  401 

William, 423 

Haman,  William, 426 

Hamaiis,  William, 158 

Hammond,  Thomas,  deceased,  petition  of  Lith- 
ermore  and  Sherman,  executors,  to  sell 

land, 350 

Hammersmith, 312 

Hamot,  Thomas, 358 

Hampton,      ...    68,  194,  201,  215,  314,  317,  383 
deputies  of,  2,  37,  67,  77,  120,   182,  221,  255, 
286,  321,  364,  416,  449 
commissioners  appointed  to  lay  out  north 

line  of, 50 

commissioners  appointed  to  lay  out  line 

towards  Exeter, 73 

ordered  to  pay  Roger  Shaw, 92 

north  line  of,  fixed, 96 

committee  appointed  to  survey  west  line, .     96 
Roger  Shaw  authorized  to  sue  the  late  con- 
stable of, 117 

boundaries,  west,  committee  appointed  to 

lay  out, 118 

west  line,  committee  to  survey  continued,  134 

return  of  committee  on, 174 

petition  of,  concerning  Mr.  Wheelwright,.  187 
case  of,  left  to  Court  of  Assistants,     .     .     .190 
and  Salisbury,  order  concerning  case  be- 
tween,      210 

line  towards  Portsmouth,  committee  to  ex- 
amine,      211 

market  established  at, 244 

and  Salisbury,  committee  to  fix  disputed 

line  between, 248 

committee  on  dispute  between,     .     .     .  262 
new  committee  appointed  on,   ...     .  282 
to  include  Captain  Wiggin's  estate,  .     .     .  293 
and  Salisbury,  final  settlement  of  line  be- 
tween,       316 

Court,  adjourned, 404 

Hanbury,  Hannah, 99 

Harding,  Robert, 21,  218 

Captain,    and     others,    discharged     from 

bonds, 207 

Marker,  John, 129 

Harper,  Robert, 410 


Harrington,  Matthew, 233 

Harris,  William, 16 

Hart,   John,    case  of,   referred   to   the   County 

Court  at  Salem, 149 

Harvard    College,    land    given    to,   by   Israel 

Stoughton,  to  be  laid  out, 12 

one  hundred  pounds  due  from  the  country, 

to  be  paid  to, 12 

charter  granted  on  petition  of  Henry  Dun- 

ster, 12 — 14 

one  hundred  pounds  and  ferry  rent,  granted 

to,  on  petition  of  Mr.  Dunster,    ...     30 
order  to  prevent  dissipation  in  students  at,     59 
petition  of  president  and  fellows  concern- 
ing payment  of  dues, 91 

towns  desired  to  make  contribution  for,  .  101 
eight  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .114 
two  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to, .     .136 

aid  granted  to, ITS' 

committee  appointed  on  finances,  &c.,  of,  179 
maintenance  of  president,  fellows,  &c.,  .  179 
teachers   in,  not  to  be  unsound  in  faith, 

&c., 182 

petition  of  president,  postponed,  .  .  .  .186 
overseers  to  choose  a  president  of,  instead 

of  Mr.  Dunster, 196 

overseers  chosen  for, 204 

one  hundred  pounds  per  annum  granted 

to, 205 

providing  a  house  for  Mr.  Chauncy,  re- 
ferred to  overseers  of, 216 

Charles  Chauncy,  president  of,  granted  five 

hundred  acres  of  land, 237 

president  and  fellows  authorized  to  punish 
for  misdemeanors  by  fine  or  whip- 
ping,     279 

appendix  to  the  charter  of, 315 

land  located  for, 344 

council's  acts  relating  to,  approved,  .  .  .  362 
overseers  of,  are  desired  to  send  letters  of 

thanks  to  English  friends,  &c.,  .     .     .  439 

Hasnemesuclioth, 192 

Hastings,  John, 260 

Hatch,  Philip, 129 

Hauthorne,  Hawthorne,  John,      .      42,  89,  134,  374 

innkeeper  at  Maiden, 46 

petition  for  remission  of  excise  on  wine,  .     91 

William,  9,   10,  29,  42,  70,  73,  89,  95,  109,  141, 

196,  218,  243,  267,  438 

deputy,  2,  37,  77,  255,  286,  320.  364,  416,  449 

commissioner  for  the  United  Colonies,  1,  36, 

77,  119,  181 
commissioner  in  reserve  of  the  United 

Colonies, 255,  364,  416 

chosen  speaker, 286,  449 

farmer  of  revenue  on  wine, 11 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


48r 


Hauthorne,  Jolin,  four  hundred  acres  of  land 
granted  to,  and  committee  appointed 

to  locate, 44 

granted   land  at   Kittery,  for  services   as 

commissioner, 68 

to    pay   expenses    of    Court   in    Gitford's 

case, 253 

and  Amos  Richardson  vs.  John  Divan,  re- 
ferred to  the  General  Court,  ....  281 
appointed  special  commissioner,  ....  288 
three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .  304 
granted  power  of  a  magistrate  in  Salem,  .  348 
one  fourth  of  Block  Island  granted  to,  .  .  356 
and  others,  plantation  granted  to,  .  .  .  .  374 
appointed  to  act  as  a  magistrate  in  Sa- 
lem,       375 

and  others,  petition  of,  concerning  claim 

of  Massachusetts  upon  Hudson  River,  395 

special  magistrate  for  Salem, 420 

committee  to  locate  land  for, 420 

and  others,  further  grant  to,  &c.,   ....  438 
provision    for    government    of    plantation 

of, 438 

Major,    ....      286,  318,  352,  375,  376,  395 

Haugh,  Atherton, 31 

Samuel, 230 

land  of,  located, 18 

Susanna,  widow  of  Atherton,  petition  con- 
cerning repair  of  house, 31 

Haughton,  Katherinc,  authorized  to  sell  estate 

of  Nicholas  Charlett, 74 

Ralph, 139 

Haverhill,     .      90,  117,  194,  201,  310,  316,  424,  437 
deputies  of,     ....    2,37,77,120,182,449 
commissioners  appointed  to  lay  out  boun- 
daries of, 5 

granted  an  island,  saving  the  right  of  Mr. 

Ward  thereto, 7 

Robert  Clement  authorized  to  give  the  oath 

of  fidelity  at, 18 

new  committee  appointed  to  lay  out  boun- 
daries of, •.     .  52 

limits,  report  by  Joseph  Jewett  approved,  .  76 
and    Salisbury,    committee    appointed    to 

decide  concerning  land  granted  to,     .  191 

line  newly  surveyed  and  approved,  .     .     .  209 

church, 309,  310 

summoned  in  relation  to  boundaries,     .     .  424 

Hawkesworth,  Christopher, 332 

Hawkins,  Haukins,  Hercules, 198 

James, 46 

Jane,  allowed  to  come  into  the  colony  for 

one  month, 8 

petition  of  sons  for  return  of,  denied,      .  46 

petition  for  leave  to  return  granted,    .     .  248 

Job, 46 


Hawkins,  Thomas, 46 

Hawley,  Dorothy, 89,147 

Thomas, 147 

and  Dorothy,  petition  concerning  sale  of 

Lamb's  land, 89 

Hayden,  Haiden,  Heyden,  John,  of  Braintree,  al- 
lowed stipend  for  care  of  his  distract- 
ed son, 51 

of   Braintree,  live  pounds  granted   to,   for 

care  of  his  son, 177 

Susan,  five  pounds  granted  to,  for  care  of 

her  son, 244 

Goodwife,  fifty  shillings  to  be  paid  to,  .     .  208 

Hazeltine,  Robert, 5 

Heard,  John, 407 

Heath,  Isaac, 6fi,  409 

William,  of  Ro.xbury,  e.xempted  from  train- 
ing,       55 

Henderson,  Archibald, Ill 

Heresy  and  impiety,    denying   inspiration   of 

Holy  Scriptures,  punished,     ....     78 

Hetherse,  Robert, 129 

Hibbens,  Hibbins,  Mrs.  Ann, 269 

William,     ....     44,85,119,135,180,188 
chosen  Assistant,     ...  1,  36,  76,  119,  181 

Mr., 378 

Hide,   Samuel,  executor  of  Richard    Oldham, 

deceased,  petition  of, 317 

Highways  and  bridges  ;  bridges  recommended 

to  be  built  by  towns  hereafter,    .     .     .  307 

order  in  relation  to  repairing, 322 

Hill,  Abraham, 236,  307 

James, 424 

Peter, 162 

Ralph,  Sen., 240 

Ralph,  Jun., 240 

Valentine, .     .     .44,  99,  189,  208,  229,  286,  340 
deputy,  ....    77,  120,  182,  222,  286,  306 
deputy  for    Dover,   notified   concerning 
absence  from  the  General  Court,     .     .  306 

associate  in  Dover  Court, 133 

Hills,  Hill,  Hannah, 90 

Joseph,  20,  29,  42,  44,  118,  134,  141,  144,  149, 
151,  176,  180,  182,  195,   196,  224,  247,  318 
deputy,   .     .  2,  37,  77,  120,  182,  222,  255,  449 
and  others  to  pay  the  fine  of  Maiden, 

&c., 70 

and  wife,  petition  concerning  sale  of  land,     90 
ten  pounds  granted  to,  for  service  about 

the  laws, 138 

of   JNIalden,  administrator  of  Nathaniel 

Edwards,  deceased, 235 

and  others,  of  Maiden,  petition  for  remis- 
sion of  fine, 236 

land  granted  to, 271 

land  to  be  located  for,  .  ' 430 


486 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Hills,  Mr., 35,117 

Hilton,  Edward,  Sen., 330 

Edward,  Juii., 330 

William, 129 

committee  appointed  to  locate  an  Indian 

grant  for, 430 

Mr., 350 

Hinckley,  Thomas, 235 

Hincksman,  Bridget, 441 

Thomas, 251,  431,  432 

and  Joseph  Wheeler,  reward  increased,  261 

Hinckson,  Philip, 162 

Hinderson,  Mr., 119 

Hingham, 183,  383 

military  officers, 47 

deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286, 

321,  364,  416 
verdict  for,  in   suit  by  Nathaniel   Baker 

against,  confirmed, 14 

and    Scituate.   difference   between,   as   to 
meadows,  referred  to  commissioners  of 

United  Colonies, 56 

Lieutenant  Joshua  Hubbard  [Hobart],  au- 
thorized to  marry  at, 69 

constables'   oath  to   be   administered   by 

Joshua  Hubbard  [Hobart],     ....  248 
to  pay  charge  for  division  of  Conihasset 

meadows, 285 

to  provide  for  Lydia  Buck,  ....     293,  294 
settlement   concerning  meadows    at,   be- 
tween Massachusetts  and  Plymouth,  293, 

294 
Captain    Hubbard  [Hobart],  to  solemnize 

marriage  in, 342 

Hitchcoke,  Hitchcocke,  Richard, 162 

sergeant  at  Saco, 163 

and  Thomas  Warner,  case  between,      .     .  245 

deputy, 417 

Mr., 435 

Hobbs,  Christopher, 162 

Hodsden,  Hogsden,  Nicholas,      ....    407,  427 

Hog  Island, 127 

Hogsflesh,  Dr., 297 

Hogsty  Cove, 266 

Holbrook,  Thomas,  land  granted  to,     ...     .  394 

Holbrooke,  John, .'    .     .     .     42 

deputy, 37 

Holder,  Christopher, 391 

Hollige,  Richard, 312 

Holman,  John,  petition  concerning  will  of  his 

father, 262 

action  of  County  Court  concerning  will  of,  284 
Holyokc,  Holiocke,  HoUiock,  Edward,  deputy,      2, 

255,  416 

Elizur,  .     .  29,  135,  136,  213,  214,  271,  314,  379 

commissioner  for  Springlis'ld.    .  115,379 


Holyoke,  Elizur,  ensign  at  Springfield,  .  .  .133 
e.xcused  from  further  attendance, ....  264 

Lieutenant, 368 

Mr., 227 

Holy  Scriptures,  see  Scriptures. 

Holt,  Nicholas, 96,  146,  178 

Holton,  Houlton,  William, 225,  368 

commissioner  at  Nonotucke, 227 

commissioner  at  Northampton,      .     .    271,  372 
commissioner,  &c.,  to  be  sworn,    ....  380 

Hood,  Richard, 243 

Hooke,  Ellinor,  petition  concerning  estate  of 

her  late  husband,  deceased,  ....  234 
widow  of  William,  plaintiff  for  dower,  vs. 

John  Alcock, 436 

William, 436 

deceased,  estate  of,  to  be  sold,  ....  233 
Rev.  William,  commissioner  on  Harvard 

College, 362 

Hoord,  John, 124 

Horses,  order  concerning  impressment  of,  for 

public  service, 26 

law  for  impressment  of,  repealed,      ...     41 
valuation  of,  for  taxation,  raised,  ....  121 

not  to  be  sold  to  Indians, 255 

Hosier,  Samuel, 47 

Houchin,  Jeremiah,  ....  38,  42,  55,  400,  448 
deputy,  .  .  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  286,  321,  364 
executor  of  the  will  of  Bozoon  Allen,  .  .116 
commissioner  for  Boston,      .     .      313,  353,  410 

land  granted  to,  &c., 375 

Mr.,  resigns  his  office  of  ensign,   .     .     .     .231 
petition  of,  concerning  estate  of  Edmund 

Grosse, 231 

Houlding,  Justinian, 214 

House  of  correction,  each  county  to  establish,  .  222 

orders  concerning,  &c., 256 

law  of  1656  concerning,  continued  in  force,  305 

fees  of  keeper, 350 

House  of  Deputies,  order  concerning  duty  of 

clerk  in  sending  bills  to  Assistants,&c.,       3 

clerk  of,  to  record  letters,  &c., 63 

negative  vote, 82 

settlement  to  be  made  with  clerk  of,      .     .113 
qualifications  of  members  of,  see  Deputies. 

salary  granted  to  clerk  of, 206 

How,  Jame.s, 139 

Howard,  Robert,  notary  public, 252 

William, 33,  44,  49 

Lieutenant, 260 

Howell,  Morgan, 164,  165,  426 

and  John   Baker,  case   between,  referred 

to  York  County  Court, 160 

Howland,  John, 17 

Howlet,  Thomas, 263 

Ensign.  5,  134,  1S8.  192,  249.  260,  282,  423,427 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


487 


Howsen,  Captain, 137 

settlement  of  estate  of, 114 

Iloyte,  Sergeant, 342 

Hubbard  [Hobart],  Joshua,  deputy  for  Hingham,     2, 
120,  181,  255,  321,  364,  416 

lieutenant  at  Hingham, 47 

authorized  to  marry  at  Hingham,  .   69,  342,  383 

Captain, 331 

Hubbard,  William,  Sen., 72,  244 

deputy  for  Ipswich,  .  .  .  255,  286,  321,  416 
one  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  &c.,  90 
one  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to, .     .  283 

land  laid  out  to, 300,  301 

Mr.,  Sen., 286 

Hudson,  Francis, 296 

William, 90,  99,  214,  400 

servants  of,  paid  for  attendance  on  the 

Court, 149 

wine  duty  paid  by,  .     .         330 

land  granted  to,  &c., 375 

damages  allowed  to,  &c., 430 

wine  license  renewed, 439 

Captain, 65 

Hudson  River, 424 

petition   concerning   claim  of  Massachu- 

settf  on,  &c., 395 

Hue  and  cry,  see  Criminal  proceedings. 
Hues,  Hughes,  Joshua,  administrator  of  Joshua 

Foote,  deceased,  petition  of,  .     .     .     .  262 
administrator  of  Joshua  Foote,      .     .     .     .311 

William, 30 

Puraell, 30 

Hull, 183,  332 

answer  to  petition  of,  concerning  islands,  .  117 
petition  of  inhabitants  of,  concerning  boun- 
dary,     331 

Hull,  John,  master  of  the  mint, 84 

sale  of  land  by,  to  John  White,  confirmed,  190 

his  bridge, 139 

his  plain, 139 

of  Newbury, 215 

Margaret, 190 

Humphrey,  Mr.,  report  of  commissioners  to  lay 

out  farm  of, 95 

Hunkins,  Hercule.s, 136,  198 

Hurd,  John, 427 

Husband  and  wife,  blows  between,  punishable 

by  fine,  &c., 26 

Hussey,  Hussie,  Hussee,  Christopher,      .     .     .  215 

deputy, 321,  364,  416,  449 

appointed  to  marry  at  Hampton,   ....  382 

Lieutenant, 403,  440 

Hutchinson,  Edward, 217,  243 

deputy, 320 

answer  to  petition  of, 350 

confirmed  in  office  as  captain  of  cavalry,  .  369 


Hutchinson,  Richard, 401 

Captain  Thomas  Clarke  plaintiff  against,    .  362 
vs.  Captain  Thomas  Clarke,  in  review,  .     .  400 

Mr., 150,  232,  260 

Idlers,  vagrants,  &c.,  constable  to  apprehend,  324 
Impressment  of  horses,  see  Horses. 

Ince,  Jonathan, 109,178 

Incendiarism  to  be  punished  with  death,      .     .     83 
Inde.\  to  the  laws  to  be  made  by  Thomas  Dan- 

forth, 422 

Indian    pJantation   at   Natick,   committee   ap- 
pointed to  fix  boundaries, 112 

wounded,  e.xpense  of  cure  of,  to  be  paid,  .  118 
settlement,   order  concerning,  on  petition 

of  Rev.  Mr.  Eliot, 137 

maid   whipped   for  homicide   of  another 

maid, 245 

College,  twenty  pounds  worth  of  type  to 

be  procured  for, 336 

plantation  surveyed,  &c.,  at  Whipsufferage,  363 

Indians, 117 

under  Pumhomand  Sacononoco,  complaint 

against  Providence  by, 14 

letter  concerning,  sent  by  the  General  Court 
by  William    Arnold    to    Providence, 

&c., 14 

in  the  jurisdiction  of  Massachusetts,  French, 
Dutch,  &c.,  not  to  tr-ade  with,     ...     21 

to  be  enlisted, 80 

becoming  civilized,  to  have  title  to  lands 

and  rights  as  English, 102 

towns  to  be  erected  for,  on  petition  of  Mr. 

Eliot, 192 

order  to  prevent  drunkenness  among,  .     .201 

horses  not  to  be  sold  to, 255 

and  negroes  not  to  train, 257 

boats  or  other  vessels  not  to  be  sold  to, .     .  277 
strong  liquors,  wines,  &c.,  not  to  be  sold 

to, 289 

trade  with,  forbidden,  except  by  persons 

authorized, 291 

land  laid  out  for,  on  petition  of  Mr.  Eliot, .  317 
complaint  that  the  commissioners  of  the 
United  Colonies  use  much  time  in  the 

affairs  of, 324 

Courts  established  for, 334 

and  Chelmsford,  exchange  of  land  between,  430 
names   of  the    chief   inhabitants   of    Pa- 
tucket,      431 

Industry  in  raising  wool,  spinning,  &c.,  incul- 
cated,  256 

Ines,  jNIatthias,  answer  to  petition  of,  ...     .  297 
IngersoU;  see  Engersol. 

Inhabitants,  ordered  to  take  oaths  of  fidelity,   .     79 
Innkeepers,  &c.,  not  allowed  to  arrest  sailors 

for  debts  without  leave  of  master,  .     .      2 


488 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


Innkeepers,  decision  upon  a  case  stated  as  to 

breach  of  law  concerning,      ....     23 
&c.,  not  to  sell  beer  above  twopence  per 

quart, 151 

not  to  allow  immoderate  drinking,     .     .     .  203 
See  Wines. 

Inns,  dancing  at,  forbidden, 40 

order  to  restrain  idleness  and  dissipation 

at, 59 

keepers  of,  to  procure,  annually,  licenses 

from  County  Courts, 287 

penalty  for  loitering  o^ drinking  at,  on  Sat- 
urday or  Sunday  nights, 347 

&.C.,  in  Boston,  see  Boston. 
Inspection  of  beef,  pork,  and  fish,  established, 

under  gangers, 39 

Intoxicating  liquors,  order  to  prevent  sale  of,  to 

Indians, 201 

law  against  illegal  sellers  of, 203 

fees  on,  granted  to  Mr.  Michelson  for  two 

years, 244 

not  to  be  sold  to  Indians, 289 

law  concerning  sale  of, 324 

excise  on,  granted  to  Edward  Michelson  .  404 

Ipswich,    .  87,  105,  165,  196,  198,  249,  310,  376,  377 

deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286, 

321,  364,  416,  449 

prison  to  be  built  at, 85 

highway  to  Andover, 103 

church,  thanked  by  the  General  Court  for 

assenting  to  removal  of  Mr.  Norton,    .  133 
and  Newbury,  Andover,  and  Rowley,  return 
of  committee  on  highway  through,  ap- 
proved,      138 

and  Boston  churches,  council  to  be  called 
at  Ipswich  in  relation  to  Mr.  Norton's 

removal, 225 

council   at,  expenses   of,  to   be  paid   by 

Treasurer, 240 

case  concerning  taxes  for  parsonage  house,  310 

answer  to  petition  of, 335 

inhabitants  of,  granted  lands  near  Quobogg 

Pond, 421 

Iron  Works, 216 

at  Lynn,  encouraged, 137 

Special  Court  for  actions  against  the  pro- 
prietors of, 155 

decision  as  to  levy  on  execution  of  personal 

estate  of  a  proprietor  in, 188 

and  Mr.  Gitford,  Court  refuses  to  hear  case 

between, 194 

auditors  to  settle  accounts  between,  .     .  195 
proprietors  of,  vs.  John  GifTord,      .     .  217 — 220 

Company  vs.  Robert  Knight, 227 

Messrs.  Keayne   and   Winslow,  attorneys 

for,  vs.  John  GilTord, 228 


Iron  Works,  decision   on  a  point  in  case  vs. 

Gitford, 237 

and  John  Giflbrd^  case  between,   .     .  241 — 244 

further  decision  in  case  between,  .    251,  252 

charter  for  a  new  company  granted, .     .     .311 

at  Concord, 429 

allowance  for  taxes  of,  to  Lynn,  revoked,  .  439 
Islands  in  the  bay  granted  to  Captain  Leverett,   115 

Isle  of  Shoals, 110,198,233 

commissioners  appointed  at, 135 

answer  to  petition  of  inhabitants  of,  .     .     .  375 

Jackson,  Edmund, 32,  99 

resignation  of   trust  of  estate  of  Thomas 

Joy, 94 

Edward,  6,  32,  54,  89,  112,   118,   135,   148,  179, 
187,  219,  264,  269,  270,  291,  317 

deputy, 2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  255 

surveyor  of  Captain  Keayne's  land,  .     .      7 

Elizabeth, 296 

Richard,  deputy, 120,  221 

Mr., 318,  362 

Jacobson,  Captain,  his  bark  adjudged  to  be  for- 
feited,       189 

Jamaica,  answer  to  letter  from  his  highness 

concerning  settlement  at, 273 

Jarvice,  John, 235 

Jeanison,  Captain  William, 148,  176 

grand  juryman  for  Cape  Porpus,  .     .     .     .165 

William, 190 

claims  Jeiferay's  Neck,  near  Ipswich,    .  423 

land  granted  to, 440 

Jeffery's  Creek,  committee  appointed  on  peti- 
tion   of    inhabitants    of,     concerning 

lands, 423 

answer  to  petition  of  inhabitants  of,  con- 
cerning bounds, 427 

Jeftes,  Henry, 240 

Jenkin,  Reignald, 124 

Jenks,  Joseph,  patent  granted  to,  for  an  engine 

for  more  speedy  cutting  of  grass,   .     .  233 

Jenner,  Thomas, 249 

Jeofferies,  JeotTeryes,  Jefferay,  Jefferys,  JefTery, 

Gregory, 164 

Jephson,  John,  answer  to  petition  of,   ...     .  297 

Jethro,  an  Indian, 407 

land  mortgaged  by,  to  Harmond  Garrett,   .     43 

Jewett,  Juett,  Joseph,  76,  90,  135,  188,  191,  192,  209, 

211,  230,  247,  270,  423,  425,  427 

deputy, 37,77,120,182,416,449 

steward  of  the  House  of  Deputies,  his  bill 

audited, 112 

Maximilian, 97 

deputy,  37,  77,   182,  221,  255,  286,  321,  365, 

449 

Jocelyn,  Henry, 358,  361 

deputy, 417 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


489 


Jocelyn,  Henry,  commissioner  for  Falmouth  and 

Scarborough  Court, 360 

and  Mr.  Jourdan,  called,  but  do  not  ap- 
pear,     318 

letter  of   General  Court   to,  concoming 

government  in  Maine, 305 

John,  Sagamore, 268,  337 

Johnson,  Edwanl,  20,  42,  44,  45,  51,  89,  96,  98,  117, 

135,  137,  141,  144,  179,  226,  228,  249,  269, 

273,  286,  291,  296,  302,  305,  307,  396,   397, 

415,  423. 

deputy,  2,  37,  77,  120,  182,  222,  255,  286,  321, 

365,  449 
to  be  paid  for  services  in  linding  the  north- 
ern boundary  line, 109 

commissioner  of  Yorli  County  Court,  .  .  131 
authorized  to  marry  at  Woburn,  .  .  .  .188 
appointed  special  commissioner,  ....  288 

land  granted  to,  ... 339 

and  John  Carter,  answer  to  petition  oi.  &c.,  353 
and  others,   committee  on  dili'eronces  at 

Wobuiu, 373 

chosen  surveyor  of  arms,  &c., 391 

land  located  for, 402 

and  Carter  and  Dutton,  settlement  of  case 

between, 407 

commissioner,  &c., 422 

time  for  locating  grant  to,  limited,     .     .     .  425 

of  York, 129 

Francis, 377 

lieutenant  at  Marblehead, 148 

petition  of, 429 

Captain  Isaac,  of  Ro.xbury, ....    442,  443 
thirty-two  hundred  acres  of  land  granted 

to  executors  of, 7,  8 

captain  at  Ro.xbury, 173 

commissioners  appointed  to  lay  out  land 

for  executors  of, 295 

land  granted  to, 375 

James, 18.  295,  399,  405 

land  granted  to,  &c.,  located,     ....  375 
John,  {surveyor  general,)  34,  47.  51,  66,  89,  97, 
110,  112,  13,5,  148,  154,  178,  262,  283,  284, 
286,  311,  340,  352—354. 
deputy,  .     .  2,  37,  77,  120,  255,  286,  320,  364 
surveyor  general,  land  sold  by,  to  Rich- 
ard Parker, 7 

overseer  of  Joseph  Weld's  will,     .     .     .51 
granted  five  pounds  per  annum,  as  sur- 
veyor general, 74 

sale  of  land  to,  by  Thomas  Hawley  and 

wife,  confirmed, 147 

three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  304 

vs.  John  Viol, 337 

land  sold  by,  to  William  Parkes,   .     .     .  354 
and  Lieutenant  Peter  Oliver,  petition  of,  333 
VOL.    IV. P,\RT  I.  62 


Johnson,  William, .     .  177 

Captain, 196,  247,  252,  406 

appointed  to  marry  at  Woburn,      .     .     .  382 

Jones,  Lewis, 343 

Joseph,  fine  of,  abated, 265 

Thomas, 33,  124 

Jones's  Hill, 43 

Jordan,  Jourdan,  Jorduine,  Robert,  357,  358,  361,  436 
and  John  Ridgway,  case  between,  referred,  211 
commissioner  for  Falmouth  and   Scarbor- 
ough Court, 360 

Mr., 230,  305,  318,  425 

Joy,  Thomas, 94 

property  to  be  sold  for  benefit  of  family  of,     32 
Joylifi't',  Jolin,  allowed  to  land  malt,  &c.,      .     .  378 
Juries,  late  law  concerning,  repealed,      .     .     .  107 
Jurors,  summoned  to  special  Courts,  to  be  paid 
by  party  for  whom  the  same  is  con- 
vened,       3 

order   concerning    choice   of,    for   special 

Courts, 60 

grand,  to  be  paid  three  shillings  per  day,  .  154 
traverse,  to  be  paid  four  shillings  for  each 

action, 154 

Jury,  order  concerning  duties  and  powers  of.  290) 

291 
Keayne,  Keaine,  Mrs.  Anna,  and  Edward  Lane, 

case  between,  referred  to  arbitrators,  .  369 
and  Edward  Lane,  settlement  of  case  be- 
tween,       391,  392 

five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .     .  410 

Anna,  Jun.,  guardians  appointed  for,      .     .  395 

Robert,  .     .     .     .   6,  7,  217—220,  370,  410,  429 

grant  located  near  Medfield,      ....       7 

and  others,  to  pay  for  guns  lent  by  the 

General  Court, 47 

commissioner  for  Boston, 62 

petition  concerning  lands  of  Sagamore 

George, 68 

Captain,      .     .     .      11,55,97,98,237,252,270 
order  concerning  disposal  of  estate  of,  .  395 
Kemble,  Thoma.s,  petition  concerning  account 

due  from  his  master,  Mr.  Rich,  .     .     .  236 
and  Thomas  Jenner  vs.  John  Pearce,  case 

referred, 249 

Kennebeck, 249 

Kennebeck  River,  the  bounds  of  Cape  I'orpns 

and  Wells, 426 

Kent,  Richard, 341 

commissioner  at  Newbury, 14 

Stephen, 117 

petition  for  remission  of  fine,    .     .     .     .135 

Keyes,  Solomon, 362 

Kibby,  Edward,  petition  concerning  estate  of 

Garrett  Bourne, 232 

Lydia, 336 


490 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Kingman, ,  deputy, 77 

Kingsly,  Kinsley,  Stephen, 29,  42 

deputy, 2,  37,  77,  120 

King,  William, 410 

King  Charles  II ,  address  to, 449 

Kittery, 214,  233,  306,  374,  405 

deputies  of,  120,   182,  222,  255,  286,  321,  365, 

417,  449 
commissioners  appointed  to  receive  inhab- 
itants  of,    under  the   government  of 

Massachusetts, 70 

commissioners  to, 109 

return  of  commissioners  sent  to,  concern- 
ing jurisdiction  of  Massachusetts  over, 

&c., .122 

powers  granted  to  commissioners  for  Courts 

at, 127 

and  York,  report  of  committee  on  line  be- 
tween,       261 

inhabitants  voting  for  Richard  Nason,  to  be 

summoned, 263 

constables  of  discharged, 281 

Knight,  Ann,  pelition  of, 282 

Ezekiel, 158 

commissioner  and  selectman  at  Wells,  159, 

160 

grand  juryman, 160 

Richard, 341 

Robert, 129,137,138,145,241 

three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,     91 
Iron  Works  Company,  plaintiffs  against,    .  227 

Mr 97,  282 

Knowles,  John,  commissioner  on  Harvard  Col- 
lege,     362 

Mr., 420 

Lake,  Thomas,       267,  374,  395 

and  others,  petition  concerning  division  of 

lands  at  Swampscott, 249 

and  Nathaniel  Gardiner's  portion  of  land 

at  Quampscott, 266 

surrender  by,  and  grant  of  land  to,    .     .     .  267 
ensign  to  north  military  company  in  Bos- 
ton,       ".     ...  349 

committee  appointed  to  lay  out  lands  to,    .  403 

Lambe,  Dorothy,   ...  89 

and  others,  petitioners  for  confirmation  of 
sale  of  land  of  Thomas  Lambe,  de- 
ceased,     66 

Edward,  deceased, 31 

Thomas,  of  Roxbury,  deceased,  sale  of 
land  by  wife   of,  to  William  Parkes, 

confirmed,    ...  89 

i^ancaster, 307,  311,  337,  372,  411 

formerly  Nashaway, 139 

orders  concerning, 138 

bounds,  &c., 139,  140 


Lancaster,  to  have  the  liberties  of  a  township,  189 
committee  to  lay  out  bounds  of,  ...  .  189 
committee  appointed  to  settle  difficulties 

at, 296 

petition  concerning  Iron  Works,  .     .     .     .311 
Lands,  &c.,  order  concerning  conveyance  of, 

see  Conveyance. 
Lane,  Ambrose,   associate   in  Court   at  Straw- 
berry Bank, 69 

special  Court  on  petition  of, 117 

Anna, 443 

land  located  for, 444 

Edward, 395 

and   Mrs.  Anna  Keayne,  case  between, 

referred  to  arbitrators, 369 

and   Mrs.  Anna  Keayne,   settlement  of 

atfairs  between, 391,  392 

Job, 249 

petition  of,  concerning  his  servant  Ebed- 

meleoh, 137 

Sampson,   .     .     .     ; 46 

warrant  to  be  issued  for  arrest  of,  .     .     .     71 
Larceny,  punishment  of;  search  warrant,  &c.,     82 
Latitude  of  north  boundary,  observed  by  Sher- 
man and  Ince, 109 

La  Tour,  Monsieur,  Captain  John  Leverett  and 

others  allowed  to  freight  a  vessel  to,  .  146 

Laughton,  Layton,  Laiton,  Thomas,     ...    9,  230 

deputy,  2,  37,  77,    120,  221,  255,  286,   320,  449 

Goodman, 435 

Law  containing  the  agreement  with  the  printer 

not  to  be  printed, 196 

mercantile  or  maritime,  see  Lex   Blerca- 
toiia. 
Laws,  to  be  transcribed  by  the  secretary  for  the 

towns,  &c.,        22,  23 

special  committee  appointed  on  printing 

of, 35 

of   the   session,  committee   appointed   on 

distribution  of, 119 

committee  appointed  on  revision  of,  .     .  149 
committee  appointed  to  examine, .     .     .  180 

of  each  session  to  be  printed, 182 

committee  appointed  to  examine,  &c.,  for 

printing, 182 

of  the  session,  committee  appointed  to  pe- 
ruse and  view, 195 

committee  appointed  to  revise  for  print- 
ing,       281 

&c.,  to  be  read  on  three  several  days  be- 
fore passage, 292 

public,  order  concerning  printiirg  of,      .     .  299 
Major   Denison  appointed   to   revise   and 

codify, 337 

to  be  printed 350 

additions  to,  &c., 351 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


491 


Laws,  order  concerning  distribution  of,  .  .  .  381 
printed,  order  conoerniiij;  distribution  of,  .  422 
new  edition   of,  to  be  in  force  in  thirty 

days,  &c., 432 

Leader,  George, 124 

Ricliard, 73,  138 

of  Lynn,  tried  and  lined  for  libel  on  the 

government.  &o., 45 

Ann  Mason  plaintitF  against,  .  94,  138,  156 
Learniiijr,  advaucement  of,  encouraged,  .  .  .  100 
Leather,  law  concerning  inspection  and  sealing 

of,  explained, 41 

Bozoon  Allen  and  William  Davies  inspect- 
ors of,  93 

Letter  from   William    Bradford,    Governor  of 

Plymouth,  respecting  Shawomet,    .     .     34 

from  Nicholas  Easton, 34 

to  be  written  to  Rhode  Island, 34 

from  William  Arnolil, 34 

to  be  written  to  William  Arnold,  ....  34 
to  be  written  to  Roger  Williams,  ....  46 
respecting  Kittery,  sent  to  Edward  Godfrey, 

&c., 73 

to  be  written  to  Gloucester  concerning  salt 

works, .     .     91 

to  be  sent  to  the  Parliament, 110 

to  be  sent  to  Oliver  Cromwell,  Lord  Pro- 
tector, &c., 110,  215 

to  be  written  to  the  Governor  of  Plymouth,  111 
of  thanks  to  be  sent  to  the  church  of  Ips- 
wich,   133 

received   from  the  Lord  Protector  of  the 

commonwealth  of  Ens-land.  .  .  .  .195 
sent  to  each  of  the  United  Colonies, .  .  .196 
sent  to  Connecticut  and  New  Haven,  .  .  199 
from  the  Dutch  Governor  to  be  answered,  251 

to  be  written  to  Mr.  Hopkins, 251 

to  be  sent  to  his  highness  the  Lord  Pro- 
tector of  England. 251 

received  from  Captain  Leverett.  ....  449 
sent  to  the  Earl  of  Manchester  and  Lord 

Say,  &c., 449 

Letters  and  other  foreign  transactions  to  be  re- 
corded by  the  secretary  and  clerk  of 

the  House  of  Deputies, 63 

book  for  recording, 73 

and   papers   from   the  General  Courts  of 

New  Haven  and  Connecticut,     .     .     .199 

from  England  to  be  answered,       .     .  195 — 197 

Dutch,  interpreted  by  Simon  Lynde,     .     .  424 

Leverett.  John,  38,  42,  44,  51,  55,  85,  89,  106,  110, 

114,  118,  135,  141,  146,  154,  179,  191,  195, 

218. 

deputy, 37,  77,  120 

commissioner  for  Boston, 62 

on  committee  for  repairing  the  Castle,  .     .     89 


Leverett,  .lohn,  captain  of  Suffolk  cavalry,  .     .  lOT 

commissioner  for  Boston, 115 

granted  islands  in  the  bay, 115 

his  father  an  adventurer  with  the  first  to 

Massachusetts, 115 

case  of,  assigned, 227 

censured  for  misconduct  as  to  ship  Prophet 

Samuel, 229 

sentence  against,  reversed, 234 

appointed  agent  for  the  colony  to  the  Lord 

Protector  of  England.  &c.,     .     .     .     .251 

committee  on  instructions  for, 253 

commissioner  to  England,  instructions  for,  455 

Levitt,  John,  deputy, 255 

Lewes,  Thomas, 435 

Lewis,  Leuis,  George, 358 

John,  fifty  shillings  e.vpended  for  Mrs.  Cole 

to  be  paid  to, '  .     64 

,  admitted  freeman, 129 

Lex  Mercatoria,   committee  appointed   to  pe- 
ruse and  report, 10 

new  committee  appointed, 69 

Limitations,  statute  of,  in  criminal  cases,     .     .     81 

Lincoln,   Linkhorne,  William, 332 

Robert, 312 

Lindsay,  Christopher,  to  be  paid  for  injury  sus- 
tained,      233 

Lithermore,  John, 350 

Littlefield,  Anthony, 158 

Edmund, 158,  160,  201,  426 

Francis,  deputy, 449 

Francis,  Sen., 158 

Francis,  Jun., 158 

Thomas, 158 

Locke,  Mr., 279 

Robert,  petition  of, 371 

Long,  Mary,  petition  concerning  marriage,  .     .     51 

Robert, 90,  329 

remitted  impost  duty, 434 

,  released  from  bond. 207 

Longley,  William, 95 

Long  Meadow, 95 

Lord,  Nathaniel, 124 

Robert, 192,  198,  282 

marshal  at  Ipswich, 188 

Nathaniel  Boulter  plaintiff  against,   .     .     .  215 
petitioner   for   review,  &c.,  vs.    Nathaniel 

Boulter, 228,  229 

Lord  Protector  of  England,  see  England. 

Lord's  day,  law  concerning  profanation  of,  .     .  150 

law  to  prevent  profanation  of, 200 

order  concerning  breach  of, 347 

Lost  and  found,  goods,  constable  to  make  entry 

of, 325 

Lothrop,  Lieutenant,  deputy, 119 

Lowe,  John, 99 


492 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Lowle,  Elizabeth,  petition  of  executors  of  will 
of,    concerning    estate    of    Elizabeth 

Goodale,.. 92 

deceased,  petition  of  overseers  concerning 

care  of  estate  of, 348 

James, .146 

John, 31,  146 

.    deceased, 146 

Joseph,  .,,..... 146 

Mary,  authorized  to  receive  legacy  from 
.  Richard  Lowle,  (to  go  to  England,)   31,  32 

Richard, 31,  92 

relieved  from  care  of  sons  of  John  Lowle,  146 

Ludkin,  William, 68 

Ludlow,  Ludlowe,  Roger,  .     .     .     .      167,  169,  172 

Mr., 14) 

Lumber,  Boston  authorized  to  control  survey- 

■    ing  of,  in  its  limits, 145 

order  concerning  measuring  of,     ...     .  222 

Lunerus,  Mr., 194 

Lusher,  Captain  Eleazar,  32,  42,  45,  54,  89,  112,  174, 
201,  202,  215,  219,  225,  228,  231,  247,  249, 
264,  284,  286,  291,  304,  314,  317,  319,  320, 
342,  362,  363,  369,  380,  391.  404,  407,  415, 
425,  445. 
deputy,  2,  37,  77,  181,  221,  255,  286,  364,  416, 

449 
commissioner    to    Plymouth     concerning 

Shawamet, 15 

return  of, 16 

confirmation  of  land  to, 117 

appointed  special  commissioner,  ....  288 

land  granted  to, 375 

appointed  to  marry  at  Dedham,     ....  383 
to  administer  oath,  &c.,  at  Dedham, .     .     .  396 

land  laid  out  for, 404 

Lygonia, 250 

Lyman,  Richard, 368 

commissiorier  at  Northampton,      ....  372 
Lynde,  Lyne,  Line,  Simon,  petition  of,  concern- 
ing case  in  Court, 145 

and  Thomas  Gatliffe,  case  between,      .     .261 
two  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  for 
services  as  translator  of  Dutch,      .     .  424 

land  located  for, 443 

Thomas, 42,  176 

commissioner  at  Charlestown, 249 

deputy, 286 

Lynn, 45,  52,  90,  95,  225,  331,  382 

deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,   181,  221,  255,  286, 

320,  364,  416,  449 
to  be  allowed  ten  pounds  per  annum  dur- 
ing the  continuance  of  the  e.vemption 

of  the  Iron  Works, 137 

bridge,  committee  appointed  to  complete,  230 
petition  concerning  bridge,  and  paupers,   .  230 


Lynn  and  Boston  boundaries,  order  concerning,  298 
cavalry  corps  to  be  raised  by,  &c.,     .     .     .  341 
allowance   for  taxes   of   Iron   Works   re- 
voked,       439 

Mackworth,  Mr., 436 

Mackworth's  house, 20T 

Macy,  Masy,  Thomas, 188,  231,  407 

deputy, 181 

Madjuer,  Michael, 358 

Magistrates,  families  of,  exempted  from  laws 

concerning  dress, 61 

granted  annual  allowance  to  pay  expenses,  154 
thirty-five  pounds  per  annum  granted  to, 

in  lieu  of  taxes  and  expenses,    .     .     .  204 
absent  from  the  General  Court  liable  to 

forty  shillings  fine, 224 

ferriage  of,  order  concerning, 253 

fourteen  only  to  be  nominated,     ....  347 

Mainard,  Elizabeth, 405 

Maine,  commissioners  to, 109 

action  of  commissioners  in  accepting  parts 
of,  under  government  of  Massachu- 
setts,     122—130 

return  of  commissioners  approved,    .     .     .131 
establishment  of  authority  of  Massachu- 
setts in  Wells_,  &c., 157—164 

thanks  voted  to  Mr.  Bellingham  and  others, 

commissioners  sent  to. 165 

answer  of  Court  to  protestation  of  George 
Cleve  against  the  government  of  Mas- 
sachusetts over, 312 

Major  general,  his  account  settled  with  the 

auditor, 8 

power  of,  see  Military  affairs. 

Makepeace,  Makepeas,  Thomas, 150 

answer   to   petition    concerning    forfeited 

boards, 10 

petitioner  for  sale  of  part  of  estate  of  O. 

Mellows,  deceased,  at  Braintree,    .     .     49 
William,  free   from    Mr.    Hutchinson,  his 

master, 150 

Maiden, 47,  89,  92,  183,  349,  375 

deputies  of,    .  2,  37,  77,  120,  182,  222,  255,  449 

mark  appointed  for  cattle, 6 

church  summoned  concerning  ordination 

of  Mr.  Mathewes, 42 

church, 70,  71 

church  members  of,  fined  fifty  pounds  for 

ordaining  Mr.  Mathews, 71 

report  of  messengers  from  neighboring 
churches   concerning  Mr.  Mathews's 

case,  &o., 90 

ten  pounds  of  fine  of,  remitted,     .     .     .     .113 
petition  of  certain  inhabitants  for  remis- 
sion of  fines, 236 

petition  concerning  highways, 237 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


403 


Malt,  order  concerning  making  of,      ....     83 

not  to  be  imported, .     199,246 

law  foi-biddiiig  importation  of,  repealed,     .  418 

Maning,  William, . .214 

Mansfield,  John, 337 

answer  to  petition  of, 429 

Mary,  answer  to  petition  of, 32 

Paul, 405 

Marblehead,  Francis  Johnson,  lieutenant  at,    .  148 
ISIares,    law    restraining     exportation    of,    re- 
pealed,      277 

Marian,  John,  decision  as  to  levy  of  execution 

on  land  of, 188 

Maritime  law,  see  Lex  Mercatoria. 

Marjerum,  Margerom,  Richard,  ....     207,  237 

Marlborough,  formerly  Whipsufferage,     .     .     .  424 
Marrett,  Thomas,  .     .     ..........     .     .     .332 

Marriage  ceremony  may  be  performed  by  two 

commissioners  of  small  causes,  .     .     .  255 
to  be  solemnized  by  a  commissioner   of 

small  causes, 322 

Marriages,  see  Registration. 

Marshal  of  Court  not  to  be  clerk  also, .  .  .  .183 
fees  of,  for  attachments,  executions,  &c.,  .  152 
granted  excise  duties  on  strong  water  at 

retail, 153 

Marshals  and  deputies  authorized  to  require 

aid  in  service  of  process, 18 

Marshall,  John,  paid  for  care  of  Court  House,  .  406 

Thomas, 9,  146,  177,  284,  441 

deputy  for  Boston, 2 

deputy  for  Lynn, 364,  416 

surety  for  John  GifTord,     ....    242,  243 
appointed  to  marry  at  Lynn,     ....  382 

Marston,  William, 314 

Martin,  Martyn,  George, 215 

Richard, 358 

Robert, 381 

William, 235 

Martin's  Vineyard, 199 

Mashepagocke, 437 

Mason,  Ann,  executrix  of  Captain  John  Mason, 

vs.  Richard  Leader, 94,  138 

vs.  Richard  Leader,  judgment  rendered,    .  156 

land  granted  to, 156 

Arthur,  land  granted  to, 396 

Hugh, 307 

appointed  to  solemnize  marriage  at  Wa- 

tertown, 339 

deputy, 416,  449 

John, 94,  156 

Joseph,  agent  for  Ann  Mason,  vs.  Richard 

Leader, 94,  156 

agent  for  Ann,  and  Thaddeus  Riddan, 
agent  for  Richard  Leader,  case  be- 
tween, postponed, 138 


Massachusetts  jurisdiction  vs.  Richard  Wooddc,  3 1 3 

Masterson,  Nathaniel, '.iU) 

Mather,  Eleazar,  proposal  to  settle  at  North- 
ampton,    345 

Samuel, 12 

Mr., 280 

Mathews,  Mathewes,  Marmaduke, .     .     .     .   70,  71 

summoned  to  appear,  &c., 42,  43 

fine  respited, 71 

confession  of,  accepted,  &c., 90 

fine  remitted, 113 

Mr.,  allowed  an  opportunity  to  give  satis- 
faction, &c., 21 

(of  Maiden,) 236 

Matson,  Thomas, 68 

Mattoone,  Hughbert, 124 

Mattox,  David, 269 

Sarah,  sale  of  laud  by,  confirmed,     .     .     .  269 

Maverick,  Antipas, 124 

Jane, 187 

John,  petition  of, 187 

Moses, 187 

Samuel,  Colonel  John  Burch  demandant 

against,  for  Noddle's  Island,  .  .  .  .132 
surety  for  John  Gifl"ord,  &c.,  .  .  .  242,  243 
petition  for  remission  of  forfeiture,  .  .  297 
fine  of  one  hundred  and  fifty  pounds 

abated  one  half, 18 

Maynard,  John,  deceased,  administrators  to  sell 

house  of,  &c., 405 

Medcalf,  Metcalf,  Joseph, 223,  317 

deputy, 181,  221 

Mr., 247 

Medfield, 308,  383,  404,  441 

deputies  of, 77,  120,  365 

report  of  commissioners  upon  boundaries 

of, 6 

name  fixed, ^ 

granted  the  usual  powers  of  towns,  ...     46 

brandmark  for, 334 

granted  addition  to  its  territory,    ....  379 

Medford, 307,  338 

small  causes  at.  to  be  heard  by  Cambridge 

commissioners, 339 

inhabitants  of.  to  train  in  Cambridge  com- 
pany,   339 

Mellowes,  Mellows,  Abraham, 357 

vote  concerning  land  granted  to,  .     .     .     .318 

Edward,  deceased, 590 

John, 312,  318,  335 

land  located  for, 357 

committee  appointed  to  locate  land  for,  338 
Oliver,  deceased,  petition  concerning  sale 

of  estate  of, 49,  50 

Mendam,  Robert, 124 

constable  for  Kittery, 126 


494 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Mercantile  law,  see  Lex  Mercatoria. 

jNIerchaiits,  &c.,  order  concerning  taxation  of,  .     38 

Merriara,  Robert, 253 

deputy, 221,  255,  286,  321 

Merrimac   River,  boundary  line  of  Massachu- 
setts three  miles  north  of, 94 

commissioners  appointed  for  discovery  of 

the  most  northerly  part  of,      .     .      98,  109 
survey  of,  as  to  boundary,  see  Boundary. 
new  plantation  established  on.  on  petition 

of  Concord, 136 

island  in,  to  be  sold  to  liberate  the  son  of 

Passaconiiaway, 403 

Merry,  Walter, 373 

Messenger,  Henry,  judgment  against,  reversed,  247 

Michelson,  Edward, 153,  383,  419 

marshal,  execution  of  all  judgments  of  the 
General  Court  and  Court  of  Assistants 

to  belong  to, 146 

fees   on   strong  water   confirmed  for   two 

years  to, 244 

marshal,  granted  three  hundred  acres  of 

land, 306 

granted  impost  on  stiong  wafers,  .     .     .     .311 
to  be  paid  for  attendance  on  commissioners 

of  the  United  Colonie.s, 311 

land  located  for, 333 

grant  of  liquor  excise  to,  continued,      .     .  404 

Middlesex  county, 201,  247,  280,  420 

military  officers," 107 

Lancaster  to  be  rated  within, 140 

order  concerning  choice  of  major  of,     .     .  149 

bridges  in,  report  concerning, 306 

Courts,  two  additional,  to  be  held  at  Charles- 
town,  102 

at  Charlestown,  days  changed, .  .  .  .186 
law  concerning  associates  in,  postponed,  .  38 
order  concerning  choice  of  jurors  in,  .  .  60 
recorder  of  deeds,  &c.,  Thomas  Danforth,     90 

Milam,  Humphrey, 66 

John, 15,  47,  55 

vs.  William  Francklin, 56 

sale  by,  of  John   Seabury's  house  to  Al- 
exander Adams,  coutirmed,    ....     64 

Mile,  Joseph, 124 

Military  alTairs,  officers,  &c.,  of  Harvard  College 

free  from  training,  &c., 14 

major  general  authorized  to  train  his  regi- 
ment once  a  year, 56 

cavalry  companies,  authorized   to  choose 

officers. 58 

sergeants  of  companies  exempt  from  con- 
stable's watches, 85 

regulations  as  to  companies,  officers,  train- 
ings, watches,  alarms,  &c.,    .     .     .  86 — 88 
oath  to  sergeant  major, 88 


Military  affairs,  seniority  of  officers  in  Boston, 

&c., 106 

commissions  for  all  officers  to  be  prepared 

by  the  secretary, 106,  107 

commissions  of  cavalry  officers,  ....  108 
soldiers  impressed,  discharged,  ....  122 
members  of  cavalry  not  to  be  officers  in 
infantry ;  regulations  for  cavalry ; 
training  by  millers,  fishermen,  &c. ; 
isolated  farmers  exempt  from  train- 
ing;   impressment    in   time  of   war; 

officers'  rank,  &c., 155 

soldiers  to  work  upon  the  Castle,  &c.,    .     .  183 
e.xplanation  as  to  rank  of  captain  of  cavalry,  183 
committee  of  militia  in  towns  authorized 
to  suppress  all  illegal  raising  of  sol- 
diers,   186 

constables  to  collect  the  tax  on  soldiers  for 

the  Castle, 202 

men   now  under  impressment  to  be   re- 
leased,      206 

soldiers  impressed,  but  not  employed,  not 

to  receive  pay, 204 

Essex  regiment  to  be  mustered  for  1655,  .  224 
seniority  of  officers  in  Boston,  ....  246 
negro  and  Indian  servants  not  to  train, .  .  257 
provisions  concerning  choice  of  officers,   .  258 

cavalry,  orders  concerning, 253 

clerks  and  sergeants  to  be  approved  by  ■ 

County  Courts, .  322 

law  exempting  cavalry  from  ferriage,  re- 
pealed,     323 

cavalry  not   to   sell   their   horses  without 

leave, 366 

order  concerning  days  of  training,    .     .     .  420 
Military  company  of  the  Massachusetts,  com- 
mittee to  locate  grant  of  land  to,    .     .216 

land  located  for 243 

See  Artillery  company. 
Military  officers,  families  of,  exempt  from  laws 

concerning  dress, 61 

Mills,  Milles,  Thomas, 158 

William,  petition  concerning  abatement  of 

fine  for  illegal  voting, 188 

Milward,  Thomas, 92 

Mingay,  Jeollery,  deputy, 2 

Ministers,  County  Courts  to  assess  towns  for 

maintenance  of,  &c., 199 

committee  appointed  on  provision  for  main- 
tenance of, 286 

provision  for,  referred  to  County  Courts,    .  314 

to  be  approved,  &c., 32? 

houses  to  be  proviiled  for, 351 

Ministry,  provision  for  support  of  an  able,   .     .  417 
Minot,  John,  Sen.,  commissioner  for  Souther- 
town,  353 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


495 


Mint,  Older  concerning  coining  silver  at,     .     .     84 

change  in  device  on  coin, 104 

approval  of  former  order  estahlishing,  .     .118 
committee  to  contract  with  master  for  rev- 

enne  from, 434 

IMiseries  and  Baker's  Island  petitioned  for  by 

Salem 422 

and  Bakers  Island  granted  to  Salem,    .     .  437 
Mistick.  answer  to  petition  of  inhabitants  of,    .  339 
and    Pauketucke,   petition    of  inhabitants 

of,  &c., 353 

River, 3.'J3 

Mitchell,  Michell,  Michells,  Margaret,     ...     43 

Jonathan, 13.  43 

Mr., 280 

Money,  committee's   act   about   minting,  &c., 

approved, 118 

Monhatoes,  messengers  sent  to. 140 

Monnequasson  vs.  Hugh  Batten,      .     .     .    227,  228 

Monroo,  Ale.xander, 52 

Monrooes,  Alexander, 114 

Montague,  Griffin, 164,  214,  233 

Moody,  William,  .  • 201 

Moore,  Goulden, 33 

Richard, 1«3 

William, 129 

Mortgages,  see  Conveyances. 

Morton's  Misery,  island, 405 

Moulton.  Thomas, 211 

constable  at  Cape  Porpu.s, l(!o 

Mousall,  Mou.seall,  Mowsall,  Ralph,    .     .     .51,307 

deputy, 37,  255 

commissioner  at  Charlestown, 249 

Muggleton,  Lodowick,  and  John  Reeves,  books 

of,  condemned,  &c., 199 

books  of,  to  be  burned, 204 

Mannings,  Eilmund, 186 

George, 51,  214,  218 

petition  for  repair  of  prison  keeper's  house,     9 
prison   keeper,   petition   of,   concerning 

suit  against,  for  escape  of  a  debtor,     .     65 
petition  of,  concerning  Alice,  a  Welsh 

woman, 92 

petition   for  release  of  Alice,  a  Welsh 

woman. 112 

toanswer  for  escape  of  Benjamin  Saucer,  213 
petition  for  remission  of  fines,    ....  234 
widow  Hannah,  deed  to  Lieutenant  Roger 

Clap, 445 

Mahalaleel, 164,  445,  448 

attorney  for  Edmund  Munnings,  e.\ecu- 
tion  vs.    George    Halsall  levied  on  a 

•wharf, 186 

vs.  Nathaniel  and  Peter  Duncan,  .     .     .  394 

Muzzey,  Alice, 249 

Mystic,  answer  to  petition  of  inhabitants  of,      .  339 


Mystic  bridge,  authority  to  take  toll  granted  to 

any  that  will  keep  it  in  repair,  .     .     .  148 

to  be  linished, 307 

Nacy,  Ricliard, 214 

Nahanikege, 399 

Naliant, 115 

Nananacus, 134 

Naotucke,  return  of  commissioners  to  lay  out 

plantation  at, 213 

Narragansett  Indians,  two.  paid  for  bringing  the 

peage, 35 

expenses  of  expedition  to,  paid,     ....  216 
Indians,  answer  to  request  of,  for  liberty  to 

make  war  on  Uncas, 299 

Narragansetts.  pay  awarded  to  divers  of  the  ex- 
pedition against, 191 

Nash,  Jame.s,  deputy, 221 

Nashaway, 22,  337 

plantation  at,  called  Lancaster,     ....  138 
Messrs.  Nowell   and   Eliot  sent  to  advise 
with  Indians  at,  concerning  choice  of 

a  sagamore, 210 

Nashoba, 192 

Nasliup, 192 

Nason,  Richard, 124,  245,  407 

rejected  as  deputy  for  Kittery, 263 

order  concerning  bond  for  good  behavior,  .  264 

Nalick 334,409,441 

Indian  plantation  at.  located, 112 

Indians,  see  Eliot.  John, 
petition  of  Mr.  Eliot  concerning  location 

of  lands  for,  &c., 362 

land  located  for, 3()3 

boundaries  of, 4(18 

return  concerning  boundaries  approved.     .  428 

Natucketf, 199 

Neale,  Francis. 358 

commissioner  for  Falmouth  and   Scarbor- 
ough Court, 360 

Henry,  referred  to  County  Court.  ....  397 

Needeham,  E., 95 

Negroes  to  be  enlisted, 86 

and  Indians,  servants,  not  to  train,     .     .     .  257 
Negus,  Jonathan,  clerk  of  the  writs  for  Boston,     68 

appointed  guard  for  Governor 440 

Thomas, 283 

Neighbor,  James, 373 

petition  of, 329 

Nelson,  Thomas,   Richard    Dummer   declared 

legal  attorney  for,. 12 

Richard  Dummer  declared  legal  attorney 

for,  on  petition  of  John  Pah^er, ...     36 

Mr., 440 

Neponset  River,  bridge  over, 98,192 

bridge,   committee   appointed   concerning 

the  rebuilding  of,      .' 231 


496 


GENEKAL   INDEX. 


Newbury,  .     .     U,  194,  201,  215,  225,  341,  382,  440 
deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,   181,  221,  255,  286, 

321,  364,  416,  449 

commissioners. 14 

military  officers, 47 

William  Gerrish  authorized  to  marry  at,    .     65 

Beujamin  Swett  ensign  at, 67 

highway  to  Andover, 103,  104 

highway  to  Ipswich  to  be  laid  out,    .     .     .  138 
and  Rowley  boundaries,  petition  concern- 
ing perambulation  of, 191 

and  Rowley  line,  committee  to  settle,  .  .  249 
and  Rowley,  return  as  to  boundaries,  .  .  263 
order  concerning  military  affairs  at,  .  .  .  341 
order  concerning  military  company  at,  .  .  362 
inhabitants  of,  granted  new  plantation,  .  .  402 
land   granted   to   inhabitants  of,  on   Saco 

River,  for  settlement, 421 

Newell,  Abraham, 327 

Newgate.  John,  petition   concerning   lands  of 

Sagamore  George, 68 

petition  of, 180 

New  Haven, Ill 

letter  sent  to, 199 

Newitchevvannicke  River, 118,  156 

Newitchawannet  River, 147 

New  Plimouth,  see  Plymouth. 

Nicolson,  Jane, 419,  433 

Nicholson,  Joseph, 419,  433 

Ninnicrot  to  pay  Pumhom  damages,    ....     95 
Ninnicraft,  expenses  of  e.\pedition  against,  to 

be  paid, 216 

Ninnigret,  return  of  expedition  against,  under 

Major  Willard, 206 

See  Ninnicraft. 

Noddle's  Island, 63 

judgment  for  possession  of,  recovered  by 
Colonel  John  Burch  against   Samuel 

Maverick, 132 

Nonacoicke, 147 

Nonotucke, 332 

petition  of  inhabitants  of  Springfield  for 

settlement  at, 136 

government  established  at, 227 

Norfolk  county, 201,247,351 

cavalry,  authorized  to  organize,  ....  279 
Court,  commissioners  appointed  for,  ...  94 
Courts,  ....  18,  44,  94,  110,  180,  232,  430 
petition  by  Hall  and  Dowe  for  relief  as  to 

county  charges, 236,  237 

County  Court,  order  concerning  expenses 

of  jury  at, 269 

Nornce,  Mr., 48,  280 

Northampton, 345,  380,  420 

taxes  to  be  rated  as  others, 259 

commissioners  first  appointed  for,      .     .        271 


Northampton,  answer  to  petition  of  church  of,  .  335 
proposal  to  settle  Rev.  E.  Mather  at,      .     .  345 

officers  for, 372 

order  concerning  religious  services  at,  in 

absence  of  Mr.  Mather, 372 

referred   to    Springfield    in    reference    to 

County  Courts, 379 

North  line,  see  Boundary. 

Norton,  Francis,  21,  34,  89.  110,  112,  118,  193,  215, 

260,  327,  373,  400,  425 

deputy,  2,  77,  120,  181,  221,  320,  364,  374,  416, 

449 
on  committee  for  repairing  the  Castle,  89,  154 
major   for   Middlesex   in   the  absence  of 

Major  Sedgwick, 107 

confirmed  captain  at  Charlestown.    .     .     .  249 

land  granted  to, 375 

land  located, 400 

Henry, 129 

marshal  at  \ork, 130 

to  be  paid  for  his  journey, 258 

John, 34,  348,  383 

is  desired  to  answer  Mr.  Pynchon's  book,     30 
twenty  pounds  paid  to,  for  answer  to  Mr. 

Pynchon's  book, 56 

Ixis  answer  to  Mr.  Pynchon's  hook  to  be 

printed, 72 

pastor  of   Ipswich   church,  removed  to 
Boston    by   advice    of    the    General 

Court, .132 

of  Boston,  overseer  of  Harvard  College,  204 
question   concerning  removal  from  Ip.s- 
wich   to   Boston  to  be  referred  to   a 

council  at  Ipswich, 225 

appointed  to  write  a  treatise  on  the  doc- 
trines of  the  Quakers, 348 

distribution  of  copies  of  books  by,     .     .  381 

thanks  voted  to,  &c., 397 

five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,    .  397 
Nicholas,  constable  of  Weymouth,  answer 

to  petitions  of, 303,  336 

Richard, 99 

Mr., 48,  280,  386 

Captain, 235,  247,  355 

Norwottuck,   committee  appointed   to   lay  out 

bounds  of  town  at, 368 

John  Webster  special  magistrate  at, .     .     .  420 
Notary  public  to  have  control  of  importation 

and  sale  of  powder, 57 

Nathaniel  Souther  appointed, 118 

fees  for  services  established.     ....    28,  29 

Nova  Scotia,  fur  trade  in, 355 

November,  fifth  of.  appointed  as  a  day  of  pub- 
lic thanksgiving, 279 

Nowell,  Increase,   44,   179,   188,  200,  209,  210,  212, 
217—219,  228,  296,  333 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


497 


Nowell,  IiicTease,  execulov  of  Isaac  Jolinson's 

will, 7 

chosen  Assistant,  .  .  1,  36,  76,  119,  181.  221 
and  aiulitor,  new  committee  on  Lex  Mer- 

catoiia, 69 

deceased,  relief  of  family  of,  proposed,  .  253 
deceased,  land  granted  to  widow  of,  .  .  281 
Parnell.  confirmation  of  land  to.    ....  294 

Samuel, 282,  295 

Mr.,   ....   10.  66,  67,  97,  151,  248,  249,  378 

Mrs., 282 

Noyes,  Noies.  Noice,  Nicholas,  .     .     .194,  292,  341 

deputy, 449 

Peter, 276 

deputy, 2 

Peter,  Sen.,  and  others,  petition  of,   .     .     .  228 

Peter,  Jun., 276 

Thomas,  53,  307,  333,  339,  371,  401,  412,  426 
appointed  to  marry  at  Sudbury,     .     .     .  382 

Ensign, 369 

Mr., 313 

Nutter,  Hate  Evil, 147,211,240,377 

Elder. 177 

Oakes,  Edward, 327,  353,  373 

deputy, 364,  416,  449 

Oakman,  Samuel, 358 

Oath  of  fidelity,  residents  to  take,    .     .     .     .   79,  80 

of  secretary. 16 

Of!:koontiquonkanus, 192 

Ognoinkongquamescit  Hill,    .  363 

Old  William,  alias  Pompassenoway,  land  grant- 
ed by,  to  John  Endicott,  Jnn.,     .     .     .  427 
Oldham,    Richard,   deceased,  sale  of  land  by 

executor  of. 317 

Oliver,  James,  .     .  .47,  146,  383,  399,  400,  419 

allowed  for  loss  on  powder, 270 

land  granted  to,  &c., 375,  399 

John, 148 

Peter,     ...    18,  107,  198,  217,  333,  399,  400 

land  granted  to,  &o., 375,  399 

Samuel,  to  be  paid  for  medical  attendance 

on  Mrs.  Cole, 50 

Captain 281 

Orrice,  Elizabeth, 349 

Osgood,  Christopher,  deceased, 33,  34 

John,  deputy, 37 

Margery,  of  Ipswich,  petition  concerning 
estate  referred  to  a  committee,   .     .   33,  34 

Ottis,  John, 52,  337 

petition  of,  for  abatement  of  fine,  ....  191 
Oyster  River  and  Dover,  case  between,   .     .     .  425 

Paddy,  William, 247,  284 

Page,  Robert, 403 

deputy, 286 

William,  deed  to,  from  George  Parkhurst 

and  wife, 189 

VOL.    IV. PART    I.  63 


Page,  William,  petition  of, 228 

Paine,  Payne,  Robert, 226,  240^  247 

William, 50,118,248,374,395 

IMi-, 318 

Palmer,  Audry,  widow,  petition  of,  granted,      .     10 

Ellinor, 32 

Henry, 201 

commissioner  at  Haverhill, 6 

John, 12 

petition   concerning   Dummer's  agency 

for  Thomas  Nelson, 36 

Robert, 8 

Walter, 315,  353 

William, 124 

granted  divorce  from  his  wife  Ellinor,    .     32 

Palsgrave,  Palgrave,  Anna, 227 

petition  for  confirmation  of  estate,     ...     69 

Richard, 69 

Mr., 227 

Parker,  George, 129 

Jame.s, 240,  430 — 432 

John, 129,  240,  430 

Nicholas, 69 

Richard,  grant  located  near  Medfield.  .     .      7 
commissioner  for  Boston, .     62,  313,  353,  410 

Robert, 240 

Mr., 11 

Parker's  Neck, 435 

Parkhurst,  George, 189 

petition  to  sell  land  granted, 234 

Susan, 189 

Parkman,  Elias, .  238 

petition  concerning  losses,  &c.,     .  .     52 

vs.  Captain  Daniel  Gookin, 227 

and    Captain    Fenn,    case    between,   de- 
ferred,   228 

Parks,  Parkes,  Robert, 353 

WiUiam,  51,  66,   112,  133,   178,  188,216,231, 
362,  391,  404,  409,  434,  445 
deputy,  ...   2,  37,  120,  181,  364,  416,  449 
attorney  for   Samuel   Cooke,  of  Dublin, 
sale  of  land  by,  to  Lusher  and  Fisher, 

confirmed, 117 

sale  of  land  to,  confirmed, 89 

land  granted  to, 134 

administrator   of  estate   of  James  A.st- 

wood, 188,  215 

and  Lieutenant  Richard  Cooke,  action 

between,  settled, 318 

land  to  be  located  for, 354 

commissioner,  &c., 422 

Deacon, 218 

Parliament,  letter  to  be  sent  to, 72,110 

petition  and  address  to,  on  accession  of 

Charles  II., 449,  453 

See  England. 


498 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Parmiter,  John,  licensed  fur  trader,      ....  354 

John,  Sen., 276 

John,  Jun., 276 

Parsons,  Hugh, 47,  96 

Joseph, 372 

Mary, 47 

Ruth, 212 

Parthman,  Elias, 428 

Pascataqua, 165,  198 

River, 49,  50,  108,  110,  164 

Pason,  Giles,  confirmation  of  title  to,  .     .     .     .  269 
Passaconnaway,  son  of,  in  prison,  as   surety, 

&c., 403 

Pasture,  see  Common  of  pasture. 

Patent  of  Massachusetts,  concerning  the  north 

boundary  of, 93,  98,  207 

Patent  for  saving  firewood, 104,  260 

lo  Edward  Burt  for  making  salt,   ....     91 
of  Captain  Wiggin,  to  be  brought  to  the 

General  Court, 115 

granted  to  Joseph  Jenks, 233 

for  making  salt,  granted  to  John  Wiuthrop,  259 
Patteshall,  Robert,  petition  concerning  money, 

detained,  &c., 90 

Pattin,  William, 240 

Patucket, 314,  337 

names  of  Indians  at, 431 

Pauketucke, 353 

Paule,  Daniel, 124 

Paupers  brought  without  consent  of  selectmen 

not  chargeable  to  towns, 230 

law   concerning   settlement   and   mainte- 
nance of, 365 

Pauquatuck  River, 357 

Pawtuxitt,  Patuxit, l-l,  15,  333 

petition  of  William  Arnold  concerning  ju- 
risdiction over, 149 

See  Shawamet. 
Payne,  see  Paine. 

Pearce,  John, 249 

Pearse,  Daniel, 292,  317 

Captain   John,    Thomas    Clarke    plaintiff 

against, 405 

Michael, 381 

Peasely,  Joseph, 351,  390 

Peck,  Elizabeth, 10 

husband  of, 10 

Peirson,  John,  and  Richard  Dummer,  case  be- 
tween, concerning  a  mill, 440 

Pelham,    Herbert,   commissioner   on    Harvard 

College, 362 

committee  appointed  to  lay  out  land  for,    .  376 

Captain, 283 

Pell,  John, 312 

Pemberton,  James,  petition  concerning  title  to 

an  island, 95 


Pemberton,  James,  declared  owner  of  Pember- 

ton's  Island, 116 

Pemberton's  Island, 95 

Pend'eton,   Pendelton,   Brian,  109,    122—131,  135, 
157,  211,  215,  282,  302,  340,  374 

deputj', 120,  182,  321,  449 

associate  in  Court  at  Strawberry  Bank,      .     69 
petition  of,  for  inhabitants  of  Strawberry 

Bank, 90 

to  hold  the  Court  at  Strawberry  Bank,  .     .     90 
associate  in  the  County  Court  for  Kittery,  .  127 

administrator  of  John  Watton, 210 

answer  to  petition  of, 236 

land  granted  to, 341 

commissioner  for  Portsmouth, 348 

James, 276 

Captain, 286,  328 

Mr., 283 

two  barrels  of  powder  loaned  to,  .     .     .147 

Penn,  Pen,  James, 18,  284 

Penniman,  James,  445 

Perkins,  William, 118 

Pesbeth,  Thomas, 276 

Pester,  Dorothy,  allowed  to  marry, 89 

William, 89 

Petapawag,  Groton  formerly  so  called,     .     .     .  235 
Petitions,  order  concerning  time  of  entry  of,  in 

the  General  Court, 183 

Petitioners  in  behalf  of  Robert  Pike,  to  be  ex- 
amined by  commissioners,     .     .     .     .194 
Pequot  River,  letter  to  Connecticut  concerning 

title  to  lands  east  of, 315 

Phelps,  Hannah, 410 

Nicholas, 349,  367,  396 

Phillips,  John, 358 

petition    of,    concerning    confirmation    of 

land  title, 422 

William,    ....     21,  90,  187,  241,  309,  349 

to  be  paid  by  Treasurer, 9 

gratuity  paid  to  servants  of, 21 

his  claim  to  be  paid, 52 

forty  shillings  paid  to  servants  of, .     .     .     56 
Samuel,   of    Rowley,    William   Hubbard, 

Sen.,  authorized  to  marry,      ....     72 
Lieutenant,  authorized  to  collect  wine  du- 
ties,      218 

petition  of,  concerning  wine  duty,      .     .  284 
and  others,  petition  of,  concerning  wine 

duty, 329 

return  of  committee  on  petition  of,     .     .  435 
Mr.  [William],  servants  of,  paid  for  attend- 
ance on  Court, 149 

Zachary,  petition  for   share   in  estate  of 
William  Skipper,  deceased,  ....     34 

Mr., 393,  425 

Phippeny,  Benjamin, 401,  402 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


49!> 


Pickard,  John, 139 

Pike,  John,  Heutenant  at  Newbury,      ....     47 

deputy, 286,321 

Robert,  .     .  73,  96,  118,  134,  175,  340,  403,  440 
commi.ssioner  for  Norfolk  Court,    ...     18 

fined,  &c., 156 

petition  of  Hampton,  &c.,  in  behalf  of,  .  194 
petitioners  in  behalf  of,  bound  over  for 

trial, 215 

discharged  by  payment  of  fine,  on  peti- 
tion of  Rev.  Mr.  Worcester,  .     .     .     .313 

deputy, 321,  364 

appointed  to  marry  at  Salisbury,    .     .     .  382 

Planter,  the  ship, 44,  97,  137 

Plomer,  Joseph, 215 

Plymouth, 110,381 

customs  on  goods  from,  through  Massachu- 
setts, abolished  conditionally,     ...     11 
commissioners  sent  to,  concerning  Shaw- 

amet, 15 

cession  of  Shawamet  by,  to  Massachusetts,     17 

Shawamet  reassigned  to, 34 

satisfaction  demanded  of,  for  affront  to  our 

commissioner  for  United  Colonies,      .   Ill 
commissioners  appointed  concerning  boun- 
daries  of   Conihasset   meadows,    be- 
tween Massachusetts  and,      ....  230 
commissioners  from,  and  committee  of  the 
General  Court,  to  lay  out  Conihasset 

meadows, 285 

settlement    with,    concerning    Conihasset 

meadows, 294 

Pococke,  John, 268 

to  be  paid  by  the  Treasurer, 66 

Mr.,  order  for  payment  of, 74 

Police  regulations,  see  Constable's  watches. 

Poll  tax  not  to  exceed  twenty  pence,  .     .     .     .155 

Pomfret,  William, 201 

authorized  to  marry  at  Dover, 188 

Pompassenoway,  alias  Old  William,  land  grant- 
ed by,  to  John  Endicott,  Jun.,     .     .     .  427 
Ponds  Farm,  the,  formerly  belonging  to  John 

Humphrey,  bounds  of, 95 

Pooly,  Richard, 235 

Poor,  laws  concerning  settlement   and  main- 
tenance of, 3*55 

Pope,  William, 32 

Pork,  inspection  of,  see  Inspection, 
packing  of,  see  Beef. 

Porter,  Abel, 312 

Grace,  petition  for  sale  of  lands,  ....  232 
order  authorizing  sale  by,  suspended,     .  248 
final  order  concerning  sale  by, ....  264 
Porters  in  Boston  and  Charlestown,  selectmen 

to  lix  wages  of, 222 

Portsmouth, 147,  348,  350 


Portsmouth,  deputies  of, .     .120,  182,  321,  417,  449 
order  concerning  County  Courts  at,  .     .     .  132 

answer  to  petition  of, 147 

and  Hampton,  dispute  as  to  line  referred  to 

a  committee, 211 

petition  of,  concerning  settlement  of  min- 
ister, &c., 297 

inhabitants  of,  to  train  under  Captain  Brian 

Pendleton, 329 

order  concerning  military  trainings  at,  .     .  338 
committee  appointed  on  petition  of  inhab- 
itants of, 425 

Powell,   Mr.,  new  church  in   Boston,  advised 

not  to  settle, 113 

answer  to  petition  of  new  church  in  Boston 

concerning  settlement  of, 177 

Power,  Nicholas, 332 

Powning,   Henry,  and   others,   land    at    Stony 

River  granted  to, 423 

Preachers  to  be  approved  by  elders  of  neigh- 
boring churches,  &c., 122 

to  be  approved,  ic, 328 

Preaching,  public,  unlicensed,  law  forbidding, 
repealed ;    heretical    teachers    to   be 

questioned,  &c., 151 

Preble,  Abraham,  129, 131,  214, 233,  261, 361, 380,  398 
appointed  to  lay  out  Major  William  Haw- 
thorne's land, 420 

Prence,  Thomas, 17,  167,  169,  172 

Prentice,  Thomas, 335,  340,  344 

assignee  of  Stephen  Day,  land  located  for,  334 

Prescott,  John, 139,  307,  342,  372,  398 

answer  to  his  petition  concerning  Nasha- 

way  and  the  support  of  a  minister  there,     22 

Price,  Walter, 374 

Printer,  Stephen   Day,  three  hundred  acres  of 

land  granted  to, 236 

three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  for 

damage  in  setting  up  printing  press,  .  306 
Printing  the  laws,  secretary  to  superintend,       .  182 

See  Laws. 
Prison,  committee  appointed  on  repairs  of,  .     .     34 
Court  refuses  to  pay  or  make  keeper  pay 

for  escape  of  a  debtor, 65 

fence  to  be  erected  around  the,     ....  390 

to  be  built  at  Ipswich, 85 

in  York  county,  committee  appointed  in 

each  town  to  build, 214 

keeper  at  liberty  to  release  prisoners  on 

bail  as  marshal  mi^ht  do 208 

committee  appointed  to  procure  a  keeper,  .218 
William  Salter  appointed  keeper  of,      .     .  220 
keeper,  to  be  paid  for  fees  due  from  Qua- 
kers,     440 

keeper's  house,  committee  appointed  to  re- 
pair, on  petition  of  JNlunnings,     ...       9 


)00 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Prison  house,  commissioners  appointed  to  re- 
pair,      51 

commissioners    allowed    interest    for    ad- 
vances,      51 

Prisoners  released  on  giving  bail, 189 

prize  men  detained  as,  their  case  deferred 

till  advice  from  England, 196 

released  on  giving  bail, 196 

Profanity;  penalty  for  swearing  more  than  one 

oath, 19 

Prophet  Samuel,  the  ship,  of  Amsterdam,     .     .  229 

Providence, 14,  17 

letter  sent  to  R.  Williams  and  others  at, 
commanding  them  not  to  molest  Ar- 
nold and  others  at  Shawamet,  ...  46 
remonstrance  by  the  General  Court  con- 
cerning rescue  of  Chasmore  by  inhab- 
itants of, 300 

Provisions  not  to  be  sold  to  Dutch  or  French,  .  120 
as  wheat,  beef,  &c..  not  to  be  imported,     .  246 

Public  notary,  Nathaniel  Souther, 118 

Pullin,  John,  answer  to  petitioii  of, 8 

Pumhom  to  be  paid  costs  by  Ninnicrot,    ...     95 
and    Socanonocho,    inhabitants   of   Provi- 
dence, &c.,  forbidden  to  molest,      .    14,  15 
letter  sent,  by  William  Arnold  ;  cession  of 
jurisdiction  of,  to  Massachusetts,  see 
Plymouth. 

Punquapogue, 334 

Purchase,  Oliver,  deputy, 449 

Thomas,  Eleazar  Way  plaintiff  against,     .  334 
Pynchon,   Pinchon,  John,  135,   136,  213,  214,  227, 

271,  374,  379,  424 

deputy, 364 

commissioner  for  Springfield,  .     .     .     115,379 

lieutenant  at  Springfield, 135 

confirmed  as  captain  at  Springfield,      .     .  314 
one  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to, .     .  402 

William, 48 

chosen  Assistant, 1 

orders  concerning  book  written  by,  &c., 
to  be   answered,  and   he  summoned 

to  trial, 29,  30 

dissenting  deputies  in  case  of,  not  al- 
lowed to  record  their  reasons,     ...     30 
John  Norton  is  desired  to  answer   the 

book  of, 30 

acknowledgment  of,  as  to  part  of  the  er- 
rors of  his  book, 48 

at  liberty  to  return  home,  to  appear  next 

Court, 49 

sentence  suspended, 72 

answer  to   his  book  by  Norton  to   be 

printed, 72 

licensed  fur  trader, 354 

Captain, 368 


Quaboag  Pond,  land  near,  granted  to  inhabit- 
ants of  Ipswich, 421 

Quaker, 391 

Quakers,   279,  308,   321,   345,  348,  349,  366,  383— 

390,  406.  419,  432 

order  concerning, 277 

order  concerning  persons  who  have  enter- 
tained,      390 

in  prison  to  be  released,  on  condition  of 

sailing  to  England,  or  departure,  &c.,  433 
prison  keeper  to  be  paid  for  fees  due  from,  440 
Court's  defence  of  treatment  of.  to  King 

Charles, 451 

Quamhiggin  Eiver, 177 

Quampscott,    committee's    return    concerning 

division  of  lands  at, 265 

See  Swampscott,  or  Squarapscott. 

Quinsey,  Edmund, 445 

Raines,  Francis, 129 

Rainsford,  Edward, 312 

Ram  Island  granted  to  George  Carr,    ....  248 
Rashleigh,  Susanna,  petition  for  sale  of  estate,     69 

Rawlings,  James, 407 

Rawson,  Edward,   15,   35,  45,  85,  116,  146,  148,  157, 
173,  180,  195,  294,  302,  312,  313,   335,  341, 
357,  448. 
secretary,  1,  37,  77.  119,  181,  221,  254,  285,  320, 

364,  416 
recorder  or  register  for  Suffolk,  ....  68 
executor  of  the  will  of  Bozoon  Allen,  .  .  116 
two  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  on 

Cocheco  River, 211 

location  of  grant  to,  approved, 301 

two  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .     .  304 

land  located  for, 333 

commissioner  for  Boston,  ....  353,  410 
secretary,  salary  raised  to  sixty  pounds,  .  391 
two  hundred  and  fifty  acres  land  granted  to,  441 

Read,  Reade,  Esdras, 37,  42,  237 

Reading, 90,  96,  178,  201,  382 

deputies  of,  ....  2,  37,  77,  120,  321,  449 
granted  enlargement  of  territory,  ....  66 
and  Winnisimmet,  highway  to  be  built  by 

Reading  and  Maiden, 92 

and  Andover,  highway  between,  to  be  laid 

out, 146 

to  Winnisimmet,  report  of  committee  on 

highway  from, 176 

and  Andover  highway, 1 78 

cavalry  corps  to  be  raised  by,  &c.,     .     .     .  341 

Redding,  Thomas, 1G2,  251 

Record  of  births,  deaths,  and  marriages  to  be 

kept, 290 

of  deeds,  &c.,  see  Conveyances. 

Recorder,  fees  of,  established, 287 

Records,  penalty  for  defacing, 79 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


501 


Records,  old  book  of,  to  be  transcribed  by  the 

secretary, 180 

Beeves,  John, 199 

and    Lodowick    Muggleton,    penahy    for 

keeping  their  books, 199 

and   Lodowick  Muggleton,  books  of,  to  be 

burned, 204 

Registration  of  births,  marriages,  and  deaths  by 

clerks  of  the  writs, 290 

Registry  of  conveyances  to  be  in  the  county 

where  the  lands  are, 22 

Rehoboth  and  Dedham,  bridge  between,      .     .     98 

Remech,  Christian, 124 

Renolls,  William, 164 

Residents  to  take  oaths  of  fidelity, 79 

Revenue  from  wine  licenses.  Treasurer  to  gath- 
er,   34 

committee  appointed  to  compound  for,  .     .     34 
on  wines,  see  Wines. 
Reyner,  Mr.,  commended  to  the  new  church  in 

Boston, 210 

Rhode  Island, 14,  15 

is  desired  to  use  no  authority  over  Shaw- 

amet, 34 

Rice,  Edmund, .     .     .     ..5.3,174,313,333,339,371 

deputy, 77,  120,  182 

land  granted  to, 112 

assignee  of  Captain   William   Jeannison, 
new  committee   appointed   to   locate 

grant  of  land  to, 148 

return  of  commissioners  to  lay  out  land  of,   176 
committee  appointed  on  petition  of,  .     .     .  248 

land  granted  to,  &c., 369 

farm  of,  laid  out, 400 

Henry, 198 

Robert, 113 

Rich,  Mr., 236 

Richards,  Edward, 243 

John, 374,  395 

Richardson,  Richison,  Amos,  .     .148,  281,  350,  404 

James, 441 

Richmond's  Island, 338 

Riddan,  Thaddeus, 156 

agent  for  Richard  Leader, 138 

Rider.  Elizabeth,  petition  for  sale  of  real  estate,  240 

Ridgway,  Ridgeway,  John, 211 

and    Mr.   Jordan,   order   concerning   case 

between, 230 

Rimington,  John, 188 

Lieutenant, 192 

Rishworth,  Rushworth,  Edward,  129,  188,  208,  240^ 
261,  360,  361,  380,  398,  421 
deputy,  .  .  .120,  182,  222,  255,  321,  365,  417 
recorder  and  clerk  of  the  vfrits  at  York,  .  130 
commissioner  of  York  County  Court,  .  .131 
associate  for  York  County  Court,  ...        132 


Rishworth,  Edward,  e.vcused  from  attendance,  237 
Robbins,  Thomas,  to  be  tried  for  entertaining 

escaped  prize  prisoners, 192 

Robbinson,  Mrs., 396 

Robinson,  William, 383 — 390 

Rock,  Joseph,  petition  concerning  fine  for  non- 
acceptance  of  constable's  olRce,     .     .138 

Rodgers,  John, 351 

Thomas, 232 

Rogers,  Ezekiel, 280 

John,  deputy, 364 

Nathaniel,  heirs  of,  and  Mrs.  Foote,  case 

between,  concerning  dower,  ....  352 

Thomas, I(j2 

William, 129 

Roote,  Thomas, 373 

Roper,     Henry,     petitioner    against    Thomas 

Browne, 46 

Rosse,  James,  answer  to  petition  of,     ...     .  244 

Rowley, 165,  225,  249,  440 

deputies  of,  2,   37,  77,  120,  182,  221,  255,  286, 
,  321,  365,  416,  449 

grant  to, 96 

highway  to  Andover, 103 

committee  appointed  to  locate  the  grant 

to .  134 

highway, 138 

and  Newbury  bounds,  petition  concerning 

perambulation  of, 191 

and  Newbury  boundaries,  return  concern- 
ing,       263 

Ro.xbury, 3,  19,  64,  138,  183,  225 

deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286, 

320,  364,  416,  449 

military  officers  at; 373 

remnant  of  former  grant  of  land  to  be  lo- 
cated,   314 

highway  to  Boston  farms  laid  out,    .     .     .  327 
granted  five  hundred  acres  of  land  in  aid 

of  a  free  school, 438 

Rucke,  Thomas, 340 

and  James  Wall,  case  between,     ....  271 

Ruddock,  John, 53,  244 

his  account  to  be  audited  and  paid,  .     .     .  191 
Rugles,  John,  deputy,     ....      320,  416,  449 

Rumly  Marsh, 341 

Rurany  Marsh, 69,  341,  392 

Russell,  Richard,  34,  51,  86,  112,  135,  141,  144,  157, 

160,  188,  196,  225,  228,  247,  286,  291,  304, 

320,  353,  355,  369,  378,  381,  395,  406,  410, 

423,  424,  428,  434,  439,  441,  4-12,  448. 

deputy,  .     .  '  .  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  286,  320 

Treasurer,  1,   37,  77,   119,   181,  221,  254,285, 

320,  364,  416 

chosen  speaker, 182,  222,  255,  321 

chosen  A.ssistant,     .......     364,  416 


502 


GENERAI.  INDEX. 


Russell,  Richard,  grant  of  money  to,  for  ser- 
vices,   35 

twenty  pounds  allowed  to,  for  loss  on  law 

books, 50 

satisfaction  promised   to,   for   money   ad- 
vanced,     119 

commissioner  at  Charlestown, 249 

appointed  special  commissioner,  ....  288 
on  committee  in  relation  to  fur  trade,  .  .  291 
five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .     .  304 

land  located  to, 333 

granted  power  of  a  magistrate  in  Salem,  .  348 

land  laid  out  for, 370 

sixteen  hundred  acres  of  land  laid  out  for,  398 
to  keep  the  County  Court  at  Hampton, .     .  406 

William,  petition  of, 369 

Mr., 249,  398,  404 

Rutherford,  Mr., 187 

Sabbath,  see  Lord's  day. 

Saco,     .     157,  160,  161,  175,  214,  233,  305,  375,  405 

deputies  of, 365,  417 

authority  of  Massachusetts  established  at ; 

made  a  town,  &c., 161 — 164 

petition  concerning  prison,  &c.,  ....  214 
inhabitants  of,   to  aid   in    arrest  of  John 

Boniton, 264 

conimittee  to  survey  boundaries  of,  .     .     .  375 
and  Scarborough  and  Falmouth,  linos  be- 
tween, to  be  surveyed, 380 

and  Scarborough,  line  settled, 399 

River,   settlement   on,    by   inhabitants    of 

Newbury,  &c., 421 

return  of  committee  as  to  boundaries  of, 

&c., 435 

Sadler,  Abiel, 208 

Anthony, 208 

Sagamore  George,  order  concerning  lands  of, 

in  Rumney  Marsh, 68,  69 

Sailors,  to  be  arrested  at  suit  of  wine  sellers 

for  debt  for  intoxicating  liquors,      .     .       2 
Salary  of  Governor,  one  hundred  marks,  4,  46,  88,  89 

one  hundred  pounds, 147 

fixed  at  one  hundred  and  twenty  pounds, .  154 

of  secretary,  forty  pounds, 63 

forty-five  pounds, 154 

raised  to  sixty  pounds  per  annum,      .     .  391 
of  magistrates,  thirty-five  pounds  per  an- 
num,     204 

of  prison  keeper,  to  be  twenty  pounds  per 

annum, 218,  220 

Salem,  .     .  87,  95,  105,  198,  225,  311,  348,  369,  377 
deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,   119,  181,  221,  255,  286, 
320,  364,  416,449 
Mr.  Gafford,  or  inhabitants  of.  not  to  pay 

for  muskets  borrowed  and  lost,  ...     73 
granted  half  barrel  of  powder,     .     .     .     .108 


Salem,  one  hundred  pounds  granted  towards 

fortification  of, 149 

petition  of  Topsfield  concerning  bounda- 
ries of, 351 

magistrate's  power  in,  granted  to  William 

Hawthorne, 375 

petition  of  inhabitants  of  north  part  of,  to 

be  a  separate  town, 376 

Major  Hawthorne  magistrate  for,  ....  420 
petition  of,  for  islands,  not  granted,  .  .  .421 
Baker's  Island,  &c.,  granted  to,  &c.,  .  .  437 
Salisbury,  194,  215,  249,  313,  342,  343,  374,  382,  428 
deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286, 
321,  364,  416,  449 
and  Haverhill,  bounds  to  be  laid  out,  .  .  5 
order  concerning  adjournment  of  Court  at,  144 
judgment   of    the    Court   in    the   case   of 

Christopher  Batt,  against, 174 

committee    to    decide    concerning    land 

granted  to, 191 

petition    of,   concerning    claim    affecting 

Hampton, 210 

petition  of,  concerning  Carr's  bridge,     .     .231 
and  Hampton  line,  committee  to  fi.x  dis- 
puted line, 248 

and  Hampton,  committee  on  dispute  be- 
tween,       26i 

and    Hampton   line,   new  committee   ap- 
pointed on, 282 

committee  appointed  on  petition  of,  con- 
cerning boundaries, 292 

church, 309 

and  Hampton  line,  final  settlement  of,  .     .  316 
order   concerning   establishment   of    new 

town  at, 341 

order  concerning  public  worship  at, .     .     .  351 
new  town,  petition  of  inhabitants  of,  &c.,  .  378 

answer  to  petition  of, 393 

new    town,   John    Peasely    forbidden    to 

preach  at, 390 

to  pay  stated  salary  to  Rev.  Mr.  Worcester,  427 
new  town,  petition  in  relation  to  settlement 

of  Rev.  Mr.  Dummer, 429 

petition  of,  for  land  adjoining  Hampton,    .  440 

Sallowes,  Thomas, 404 

Salmon  Brook, 437 

Salt,  patent  for  making, 91,  259 

committee  appointed  for  procuring  supply 

of, 224 

to  be  measured, 367 

Salter,  William,  appointed  prison  keeper,    .     .  220 
answer  to  petition  of,  concerning  repairs  of 

prison, 427 

Saltoiistall,  Sir  Richard, 11,398 

Richard,  commissioner  on    Harvard  Col- 
lege,     362 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


503 


Saltonstall,  Richard,  and  Henry  Ashurst,  substi- 
tutes for  commissioner  to  England,  455,  456 

Robert, 44,  398 

grant  of  land  (to  his  father)  allowed  to 

be  located  for, 1 1 

Samborne,  John, 67,  215 

Samuel,  John,  answer  to  petition  of,    ...     .  283 

Saucer,  Benjamin, 213 

Sauier,  Thomas, 139 

Saunders,  Edward, 212,  235 

John 158,  161,  211,  380 

deputy, 181 

Mr., 51 

Savage,  Thomas,  86,   106,  188,  202,  204,  231,  286, 

373,  374,  396,  400,  425,  436,  438,  447,  448 

deputy, .     .     .  181,  221,  255,  286,  364.  416,  449 

chosen  speaker, 365,  417 

John  GifTord  plaintiff  against, 331 

land  granted  to,  &c., 375 

commissioner  for  Boston,      .  115,  313,  353,  410 

Captain, 247,  253,  281,  319 

Sayers,  John, 132 

Scadlocke,  William, 162,  398,  426 

clerk  of  the  writs  at  Saco, 163 

Scarborough, 350 

deputies  of, 365,  417 

established  as  a  town,  &c.,  formerly  Black 

Point,  &c., 359—361 

and  Saco  line,  committee  to  survey,      .     .  375 

limits  of, 380 

lines  towards  Saco  and  Falmouth  settled,  399 
Schools,  teachers  in,  not  to  be  unsound  in  faith, 

&c., 183 

Scituate, 56 

Scotchmen,  to  be  enlisted, 86 

petition  of, 232 

Scott;  Mary, 410 

Scottow,  Joshua, 99 

Ensign, 146 

Scriptures,  Holy,  penalty  for  denying  inspira- 
tion of, 78 

Seaberry,  John, ...     64 

Seal  of  the  colony,  fees  of  the  Governor  for 

afB.xing,  &c., 58 

Search  warrant  in  cases  of  theft, 82 

Secretary,  order  concerning  duty  of,  in  sending 

bills  to  the  House  of  Deputies, ...      3 

form  of  oath  for, 16 

to  transcribe  laws  for  the  towns,  .     .     .22,  23 

granted  forty  pounds  salary, 63 

and  clerk  of  the  House  of  Deputies  to  re- 
cord letters,  &e., 63 

to  write  to  Gloucester  respecting  .salt  works,     91 
to  prepare  military  commissions,  &c.,    .     .107 

to  be  paid  for  e.xtra  .services, 146 

to  transcribe  the  old  book  of  records,    .     .180 


Secretary,  to  superintend  printing,  &c.,    .     .     .  182 

to  give  list  of  fines  to  auditor, 185 

ten  pounds  to  be  paid  to,  for  loss  on  corn,  282 
salary  of,  raised  to  sixty  pounds,  .     .     .     .  391 
Secretary's  salary,  see  Salaries. 
Sedgwick,  Sedjuke,  Robert,  89,  107,  154,  193,  195, 

213 

Major  General, 77 

and  others,  former  farmers  of  wine  duty, 
their  bonds  returned  to  them,     .     .     .112 

Major, 107 

Seely,  Richard, 136 

Selectman,  officer  named  by  the  General  Court,  134 
Selectmen   of    towns,   authorized   to   regulate 

fences, 153 

to  apportion  spinning,  &c.,  among  the  sev- 
eral families ;  to  direct  pasturage  of 

sheep,  &c., 256 

to  direct  constables'  watches, 293 

Sellecke,  David,  fine  remitted, 117 

deceased,  administrator  of,  authorized  to 

sell  house,  &c.,  of, 305 

Servants,  fugitive,  to  be  arrested  by  constables,  32G 
paid  for  attendance  on  the  Court,      .     .     .180 

Sevens,  John, 279 

Sewall's  field, 139 

Shapleigh,  Shapleygh,  Nicholas,  73,  124,  136,  261, 
292,  341,  360,  361,  374,  380,  398,  420 
allowed  to  return  to  Massachusetts  for  one 

year  to  settle  affairs, 114 

appointed  to  settle  accounts  in  York  county,  126 

certain  privileges  granted  to. 126 

associate  for  York  County  Court 132 

and  Robert  Knight,  judgment  of  inferior 

Court  in  case  between,  reversed.    .     .138 

Treasurer  of  York  county, 165 

vs.  Hugh  Gunnison, 189 

Captain, 273,  316 

Shattocke,  Samuel, 349,  367 

Shaw,  Shawe,  John, 282,312 

referred  to  County  Court, 314 

Roger, 44,  49,  201 

deputy, 37,  77,  120 

authorized  to  levy  eight  pounds  on  in- 
habitants of  Hampton  for  powder, .     .     63 

to  be  paid  by  Hampton, 92 

authorized  to  sue  constable  of  Hampton 
for  money  advanced  for  Hampton, .     .117 
Shavvomet,  Shawamett,  Shawoamett,  .     .     .    14,  15 
and     Pawtuxet,    commissioners    sent     to 

Plymouth  concerning, 15 

ceded  to  Massachusetts, 17 

accounted  part  of  Sufliblk  county,     ...     19 

reassigned  to  Plymouth, 34 

and  Patuxet,  inhabitants  protected  against 
claims  of  Providence, 46 


504 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


Shawshin  and  Cambridge,  settlement  between, 

as  to  land  titles,  taxes,  &c.,    ....  238 
town  of  Billerica  established  on  petition  of 

inhabitants  of, 237 

Sheafe,  Jacob, 331 

Ml'.,  vs.  Jcshua  Hues,  administrator,  .     .     .  281 
Sheep,  order  concerning  washing  of,  and  care 

of  wool, 121 

law  concerning, 198 

raising  of,  encouraged, 256 

law  restraining  the  killing  of  rams,   &c., 

repealed, 292 

ewe,  valuation  of,  for  taxation, 367 

Sheires,  Jeremiah, 124 

Shelden,    Sheldon,  Mr.,  vs.   Joshua  Hues,  ad- 
ministrator,    281 

vs.  administrator  of  Jo.shua  Foote,      .     .     .311 

Shephard,  Shepheanl,  John,  land  granted  to,    .  443 

Margaret, 43 

Ralph, 236 

_Eev.  Mr.  Thomas, 65 

pastor  of  Cambridge,  deceased,  liberty  to 

executors  of,  to  sell  land, 11 

deceased,  order  concerning  sale  of  es- 
tate of, 43 

Sherborne,  Henry, 198 

associate  in  Court  at  Strawberry  Bank,  .     .  69 

associate, 115 

administrator  on  estate  of  Ambrose   Gib- 
bons,      298 

commissioner  for  Portsmouth, 348 

deputy, 417 

Sherman,  Shearman,  John,   42,   53,   134,   176,  217, 

227,  228,  232,  243,  273,  275,  296,  308,  350, 
372. 

deputy, 37,  120 

petition  for  release  of  forfeiture  on  bond,  .  8 
and  Jonathan  Ince,  surveyors  under  Wil- 
lard  and  Johnson  of  the  northern  boun- 
dary line, 109 

Samuel,  order  concerning  estats  of,  .     .     .  92 

Ensign. 412 

his  case  to  be  determined  at  Cliarlcstown 

Court, 376 

Sergeant, 112,  117,  148,  178 

Mr., 280 

Shillings, 104 

See  Mint. 

Shore,  Shoare,  Sampson, 10 

and  Thomas  Dier,  judgment  in  case  be- 
tween,        436 

Short,  Henry, 191,  209,  341 

attorney  for  Stephen  Dunimer,      ....  10 
Slirewsbury,  portion  of  land  for  inhabitants  of, 

at  Quampscott, 266 

Shrinipton,  Henry, 175,  262 


Silver,  see  Coin. 

Silver,  coining  of,  see  Mint. 

Simes,  Zachary, 383 

Simmes,  William, 431 

Simons,  John, 89 

See  Syms. 

Simson,  Susan, 189 

Skinner,  Tliomas,  innkeeper  at  Maiden,  ...     89 

Skipper,  Mary, 34 

order  for  settlement  of  estate  of,  by  Messrs. 

Cotton  and  Cobbett, 34 

Skittery  Gussett,  an  Indian  sagamore,      .     .     .  422 
Slate  Island  granted  to  William  Torrey,  ...     33 

Smale,  Francis,     .    " 358,  422 

Smith,  Daniel, 232 

has  liberty  to  show  cause  why  Grace  Por- 
ter .should  not  sell  real  estate,     .     .     .  248 
decision  as  to  Grace  Porter,  on  petition  of,  264 

Francis, 376 

George,  associate  at  Dover  Court,      ...     95 

Henry, 214 

deputy, 37 

appointed  magistrate  with  full  powers  at 

Springfield, 49 

excused  further  attendance  at  Court,      .     49 
deputy  from  Springfield,  excused,      .     .     72 
Hugh,  executor  of  Thomas  Elthrop,  de- 
ceased,      193 

John, 176,  177,  276 

of  Dorchester,  quartermaster  of  Suffolk 

cavalry, 107 

of  Saco, 163 

of  Charlestown,  petition  of, 262 

of  Charlestown,  petition  for  confirmation 

of  sale  of  land, 407 

Lawrence,  referred  to  the  county  Court,     .  190 

Margaret, 410,  433 

Nathaniel,  deceased,  Nathaniel  Edwards 

executor, 71,  72 

Richard, 375 

vs.  Benjamin  Muzzey, 355 

Mr.,  chosen  captain  at  Springfield,   .     .     .  135 

Socanonocho, 14,  15 

Somersby,  Anthonj', 341 

Sommer,  William, 446 

Southen,  George, 333 

Souther,  Nathaniel,  notary  puljic,  .     .  .     .  118 

Southern  line  of  the  patent,  committee  appointed 

to  survey, 424 

Souther  Town  established  as  a  town  on  petition 

of  inhabitants  of  Mystic,  &c.,     .     .     .  353 
boundaries  fixed,  officers  appointed,  &c.,  .  353 

Southwick,  Cassandra, 349,  366 

Daniel, 366 

Josiah, 367 

Lawrence, 349,  366 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


505 


Soulhwicke,  Provided, 3G6,  410 

Spaldeii,  Edward, 237 

Sparauhawke,  Sparauhauke,  Nathaniel,  ...  9 
of  Cambridge,  deceased  order  concerning 

eslate  of, 9 

Speaker  ciiosen, 449 

Specie,  see  Coin. 

Spencer,  Roger, 435 

Tliomas, 124,  407 

Spinning.  &c.,  under  control  of  selectmen,  .     .  256 

Spinny,  Thomas. 124 

Spirituous  liquors,  duties  imposed  on,  except 

from  England,  .     .   _ 152 

retail  duties  granted  to  the  marshal,  .     .     .153 

Sprague,  Sprage,  John, 177,  236 

Richard, 380 

deputy, 364,  416,  449 

Springfield,  ....  227,  332,  335,  374,  380,  406 
deputies  of,  ....  2,  37,  77,  120,  255,  416 
Henry  Smith  appointed  to  govern  at ;  to  try 

causes,  &c., 49 

allowed  to  choose  a  deputy,  or  not,  as  in- 
habitants decide, 67 

John  Pynchon,   E.   Holyoke,  and   Samuel 

Chapman,  commissioners  to  govern,    .  115 

commissioners' oath, 115 

Court,  commission  for,  renewed,    .     .     .     .180 
commissioners    authorized   to    administer 

oath  to  freemen  at, 135 

a  gun  loaned  to, 135 

military  officers  confirmed, 135 

petition  of   inhabitants  concerning  settle- 
ment at  Nonotuck, 136 

commission  to  former  commissioners  con- 
tinued,      213 

and  Northampton  to  be  assessed  by  con- 
stables,      259 

military  officers  of,  confirmed, 314 

order    concerning    Courts    for,    including 

Northampton, 378 

commissioners  to  have  power  of  County 

Court  at, 379 

military  affairs  at, 379 

commissioners   of,  to   administer   oath   to 

freemen, 406 

Courts  at, 420 

prison  or  house  of  correction  to  be  built  at,  434 
commissioners  of,  granted  certain  powers,  434 

Spurrell,  Christopher, ...  164 

Spurwincke, 359 

Stacy,  Richard,  answer  to  petition  of,  .     .     .     .  425 

Staines,  Richard, 114 

Stainton,  Thomas, 315 

Stamford,  Thomas, 358 

Standfast,    Captain   Barnaby,    Thomas    Young 

plaintiff  against,  order  concerning  trial,    21 
VOL.    IV.  — PART    I.  64 


Stanion,  Anthony, 270 

deputy, 182 

order  concerning  forfeiture  by,      ....  210 

iVlr., 245 

Slarbucke,  Edward, 240,  341,  377 

Starr  Island, 127 

Starr,  Comfort, 13 

Thomas,  surgeon,  four  hundred  acres   of 
land  granted  to  widow  and  children 

of, 355 

Staunton,  Thomas, 335,  353 

Stebbin,  Martin, 297 

licensed  victualler,  Boston, 112 

petition  for  license, 340 

Stedman,  John,  licensed  fur  trader,      ....  354 

, 217 

Sterne,  John, 240 

Sterne.s,  John,  petition  for  remission  of  fine,      .  293 
Stevens,  Steevens,  Stephens,  John,  .     .     .     191,209 

William, 423,  427 

deputy, 120 

Sergeant, 342 

Stephenson,  Marmaduke, 383,  390 

Stileman,  Elias, 310,  348 

petition  for  wine  license  referred  to  Salem 

Court, 148 

commissioner  for  Portsmouth, 348 

Stiltson,  William, 445 

Stirke,  George, 15 

Stirt,  Edward, 129 

St.  Maze,  Monsieur, 71 

Stocker,  Thomas, 424 

Stoddard,  Anthony,    .    9,  34,  331,  373,  423,  425,  434 

deputy, 2,  364,  416,  449 

on  committee  to  repair  the  prison,  ...  34 
confirmation  of  house  and  land  to,  .  .  51,  52 
commissioner  for  Boston,  .  62,  115,  313,  410 
commissioner,  &c.,  concerning  arms,  &c., .  422 
five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .     .  441 

Mr., 216,  395 

commissioner  for  Boston, 353 

vs.  Simon  Bradstreet, 375 

Stone,  John, .     .     .  264,  354.  369,  376,  401,  405,  409 

and  others,  petition  of, 228 

title  to  land  confirmed  ou  the  petition  of, 

&c., 263 

of  Sudbury,  new  committee  appointed  to 

locate  land  for, 313 

of  Sudbury,  land  laid  out  for, 339 

Simon, 398 

Stone's  Meadow. 95 

Stony  River,  land  at,  granted  to  Henry  Pown- 

ing  and  others, 423 

Stoughton,  Elizabeth,  widow,  petition  concern- 
ing sale  of  real  estate. 15 

petition  concerning  bridge  at  Neponset,     .  192 


506 


GENERAL   IJSIDEX. 


Stoughton,  Israel,  deceased,  land  given  to  Har- 
vard College  by,  to  be  laid  out,  ...  12 

Captain, 231 

Stover,  Silvester, 129 

Strangers,  authorized  to  enter  actions  in  any 

Court, 20 

above  si.xteen  years  old,  to  give  account  to 

Governor, 23,  21 

laws  concerning  entertainment  of,  without 

leave,  to  be  enforced, 23 

order  renewed  concerning  registration  and 

entertainment  of, 63 

Strawberry  Bank, 42.5 

granted  increase  of  territory, 69 

associates  in  Court  at, 69 

petition  for  increase  of  territory  of,    ...  90 
authorized  to  send  a  deputy  to  the  General 

Court, 108 

answer  to  petition  of, 115 

answer  to  petition  of,  concerning  civil  and 

military  officers, 147 

Sumner,  William,  deputy, 320 

Sudbury,  198,  225,  307,  317,  329,  369,  376,  382.  409, 

428 

deputies  of,     ....   2,  37,  77,  120,  182,  449 

petition  granted  ;  boundaries  recorded,      .  9 
and  Watertown,  bounds   between,   to   be 

laid  out, 32 

report  of  committee  settling  bounds  of,  53,  54 
return   of    Simon  Willard  concerning  en- 
largement of, 74 

book  of  registry  of  lands,  &c.,  to  be  deliv- 
ered to  the  recorder  of  Middlesex,  .  90 
special  committee  to  settle  differences  at,  228 
territory  granted  to,  for  a  new  plantation,  .  264 
return  of  committee  concerning  dispute  at,  274 
charges  of  committee  of  the  General  Court, 

&c.,  at,  to  be  paid, 284 

Suffolk  county,       ...     5,  201,  247.  280,  354,  390 

Shawwaraett  and  Patu.xit  annexed  to,   .     .  19 

law  concerning  associates  in,  postponed,    .  38 

order  concerning  choice  of  jurors  in,     .     .  60 

Court,  postponed, 72 

military  ollicers, 107 

officers  of  the  troop  of  horse  in,  ,     .     .     .  107 
cavalry,  new  election   of  officers  ordered 

in, 85 

regiment,   choice  of   sergeant   major   de- 
ferred,        85 

order  concerning  choice  of  major  of,      .  149 

choice  of  major  for, 229 

to  pay  part  of  repairs  of  prison.    ....  427 

Suicides,  law  concerning, 432 

Sumpner,  Katherine, 262 

Sumptuary  laws,  order  against  excess  in  ap- 
parel,    60 


Surveyor  of  arms,  &c., 146 

Sutton,  Richard, 340 

Swearing, 19 

Swainc,  Swayne,  Richard,  petition  concerning 
attachment  of  lands  in   Hampton  by 

Colcord  and  Sanborn, 67 

referred  to  a  County  Court, 267 

lined  for  entertaining  Quakers,      ....  407 

William, 67 

Swampscott,  petition  of  Captain  Thomas  Wig- 
gin,  for  division  of  patent  of,      ...  135 
committee  on  division  of  lands  at,    .     .     .  249 

Swett,  Benjamin, 215 

approved  as  ensign  at  Newbury,  ....     67 
Swine,  damages  by.  through  approved  fences, 

actionable, 58 

regulation  of,  &c., 322 

late  law  concerning,  repealed,      ....  107 

Symonds,  Syraons,  Simons,  John, 124 

Samuel,  34,42,  109,   122—131,   141,  144,   182, 
196,  206,  217,  245,  252    277,  330,  360,  361, 
448. 
Assistant,   1,  36.  76,  119,  181,  221,   254,   285, 

320,  364,  416 
to  keep  the  County  Courts  in  Norfolk,  .  44 
three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  65 
five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .  180 
commissioners  appointed  to  locate  land 

to, .192 

associate  in  York  County  Court,  .  .  .  224 
to  hold  Norfolk  County  Court,  ....  232 
answer  to  petition  of,  concerning  location 

of  grant, 303 

location  of  grant  to,  near  Dover,    .     .     .  330 

commissioner, 338 

committee  appointed  to  locate  grant  for,  350 
is  desired  to  locate  land  elsewhere  than 

on  Connecticut  River, 380 

land  located  for, 395 

an  island  in  Casco  Bay  granted  to,    .     .  406 

land  granted  to, 420 

Syms,  Mr., 280 

See  Simmes. 
Synod,  to  meet  at  Boston  on  request  of  the  Gen- 
eral Court  of  Connecticut,      ....  280 
Tahanto,  sagamore,  grant  by,  to  William  Hil- 
ton,       430 

Ta.x,  twenty-five  per  cent,  additional  levied,     .  205 
Taxes,  officers,  &c.,  of  Harvard  College  free 

from,  (in  part,) 14 

produce  received  for,  at  rates  fixed,  ...     26 

not  payable  in  wampum, 36 

order  concerning  assessment  of.  on  mer- 
chants and  shopkeepers,    .     .     .     .    37,  38 

to  be  increased  fifty  per  cent., 38 

corn,  &c.,  received  at  stated  prices  for,      .     63 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


507 


Taxes,  price  of  corn,  &c.,  for, 106 

on  horses, 121 

to  be  double  the  usual  rate, 122 

levied  recently,  returned,  and  impressed 

soldiers  released, 122 

to  be  twenty  pence  on  each  poll, ....  155 
corn,  &c.,  received  for,  at  stated  prices,     .  205 

price  of  corn  for,  reduced, 220 

twenty-iive  per  cent,  additional  levied ;  to 

be  paid  in  produce  at  stated  prices,   .  245 
constables  to  settle  their  accounts  of,  in 

May,  annually, 247 

persons  removing  not  to  pay  in  corn,  .  .  253 
corn,  &c.,  received  at  stated  prices,  .  .  .  279 
law  for  more  equal  assessment  of,  .  .  .  288 
increased  twelve  and  a  half  per  cent.,  .     .281 

constables  to  collect, 308 

com  received  for,  at  stated  prices,     .     .     .  309 
for  church  purposes,  decision  as  to  power 
of  towns  to   bind  all    inhabitants  to 

pay 310,311 

twentv-five  per  cent,  additional,  levied,  .  318 
corn,  &c.,  received  at  stated  prices,  .  .  .  348 
advanced  twenty-five  per  cent.,     .     .     .     .410 

prices  of  corn,  &c.,  for, 434 

county,  see  County  expenses. 

Taylor,  George, 358 

Tearne,   Tearnes,   Miles,   authorized   to  make 

drumheads  for  public  use,      ....   149 
and  wife,  petition  concerning  land  of  Rob- 
ert Rice,  deceased, 113 

Temple.  Colonel  Thomas,  to  be  loaned  three 

hundred  pounds  of  shot, 342 

governor  of  Acady  and  Nova  Scotia,     .     .  355 

Testimony,  to  be  presented  in  Court  in  writing,     27 

order  concerning  fair  writing  out  of,  &c.,  .     8.5 

Thanksgiving  appointed,  1654, 199 

appointed  November  5,  1656, 279 

appointed  December  8,  1659, 382 

Thatcher,  Mr., 280 

Thaver,  Richard, 342 

Thing,  Jonathan, 158,161,214,233 

constable  of  Wells, 158 

Thirston,  Daniel,  Jun., 215 

Thomas,  Evan, 133,214,330 

surety  for  John  Gilford,  &c.,      .     .     .    242,  243 

damages  allowed  to,  &c., 439 

wine  license, 439 

Rise, 124 

Thompson,  Tompson,  Ann,  late  wife  of  Simon 
Cro.sby,  decea.sed,  petition  concerning 

his  estate, 65 

John, 398 

attached,  at  the  suit  of  Dorchester,  to 
attend  trial  concerning  Thompson's 
Island, 21 


Thompson,    John,    judgment     rendered    for, 

against  the  inhabitants  of  Dorchester,     33 

William, 315 

petition   concerning  fine   for   proposing 
marriage    to    Sarah   Coggan  without 

leave  of  her  friends, 147 

Thompson's  Island, 397 

Winnuequassum,  an  Indian,  allowed  to 

bring  suit  for, 209 

Thorley,  Richard, 139 

Thorpe,  Mr., 426 

Tibbett,  Walter,  deceased,  will  of,  admitted  to 

probate, 118 

Till,  Peter, 312 

Tilley,  Mrs.,  answer  of  Court  to  petition   for 

pardon  of, 24 

Timber,  see  Common. 

Tincker,  John, 235 

fined  for  selling  strong  water  to  Indians,    .  251 

commissioned  to  marry, 336 

licensed  fur  trader, 354 

committee  appointed  on  petition  of,  .     .     .  397 

Tinney,  John, 358 

Titcombe,  William,  deputy, 221,  255 

Topp,  Mary, 129 

Toppan,  Abraham,  petition  of,  concerning  es- 
tate of  Elizabeth  Goodale,     ....     92 

Topsfield,  established  as  a  town, 33 

petition  concerning  bounds  of,      ....  351 

Torrey,  William 230,  294 

Slate  Island  granted  to, 33 

clerk  of  the  writs  at  Weymouth,  ....    34 
Captain,  appointed  special    commissioner 
for   Hingham,  Weymouth,  and   Nan- 

tasket,   ' 288 

appointed  to  marry  at  Weymouth,      ,     .  383 

Slate  Island  granted  to, 407 

Tonne,  William, -260 

Town  elections  changed  to  second  week  in 

March, 101 

offices,  sealer  of  weights  not  necessarily 

to  be  a  selectman, 134 

affairs,  duties  of  freemen  in, 335 

officers,  qualifications  for,  duties  of  select- 
men, &c., 335 

right  to  land  under  a  stated  case, ....  368 
Towns,   order   concerning    providing  powder, 

&c.;  by,  sent  by  secretary,      ....       6 
persons  removing  from,  not  entitled  to  any 

share  in  the  powder,  &c.,  provided  by,     35 
having   great   guns,  to  provide  carriages, 

&c., 105 

having  thirty  freemen  or  less,  to  send  dep- 
uties or  not  to  the  General  Court,  as 
they  choose ;  towns  sending  to  bear 
the  charges  of  their  deputies,     .     .     .  154 


508 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Towns,  ordnance  in,  to  be  mounted,    ....  222 
authorized  to  furnish  houses  for  ministers,  351 
order  concerning  settlement  of  paupers  in,  365 
Trade,  committee   appointed   on  the  improve- 
ment of, So 

committee  appointed  for  improvement  of,  .  246 
Trask,  Captain  William,  four  hundred  acres  of 

land  granted  to, 355 

Traske,  Margaret, 433 

Mary, 410 

Treasurer,  Richard  Russell,  1,  37,  77,  119,  181,  254, 

285,  320,  364,  416 
his  account,  committee  appointed  to  exam- 
ine,       6 

his  account  settled, 35 

and  auditor's  accounts,  committee  to  take,     89 
satisfaction  to  be  given  to,  for  money  ad- 
vanced,     119 

and  auditor,  annual  accounts  of,  to  be  pub- 
lished,       152 

to  issue  warrants  for  collection  of  fines,     .  185 

to  receive  wine  duty, 260 

to  perform  duties  of  auditor, 318 

committee  to  audit  account  of,  .  .  .  .319 
committee  to  take  his  account,  ....  373 
committee  to  audit  account  of,  ....  425 
Treasurer's  account,  settlement  deferred,  .  .186 
account,  committee  appointed  on,  .     .  202 

account,  committee  to  audit, 260 

Treasurers  for  counties  to  be  chosen,  .         .     .  185 
to  issue  wanants  for  collection  of  fines,     .  185 
county,  order  concerning  choice  of,  .     .     .  259 
Trespass,  order  concerning  suits  for ;  tender  a 

bar  to  costs,  if  trespa.ss  was  involuntary,       4 
cattle  committing,  owners  to  be  liable  for,  290 
See  Actions  at  law. 

Tristram,  Trustrum,  Ralph, 162 

constable  at  Saco, 163 

Trott,  Simon, 164 

Trumble,  John, 272,  297 

Trusler,  Thomas,  fine  remitted, 32 

Tucke,  Robert, 341 

Tucker,  John,  and  wife,  vs.  John  Otis  and  John 

Mansfield, 337 

Robert, 118 

Tuisdale,  John,  Sen., 129 

John,  Jun., 129 

Turbat,  Peter, 164 

Turner,  Lawrence, 190 

Robert, 90,  253,  329 

to  be  paid  charges  of  council  at  Ipswich,  240 
to  provide  for  the  conference  of  minisler.s,  280 

wine  license  renewed, 439 

to  be  paid  his  claim, 441 

Turner's  Hill, 138 

Twelves,  Robert, 445 


Tyng,  Ting,  Edward, 151,  291,  448 

commissioner  for  Boston,      .     62,  115,  313,  410 
administrator  of  William  Tyng,     ....  215 
two  hundred  and  fifty  acres  of  land  grant- 
ed to,  397 

land  located  for, 442 

William, 42,  44,  47,  55,  99,  215 

deputy, 2,  37 

commissioner  for  Boston, 62 

allowed  payment  for  wood, 55 

twenty  shillings  allowed  to,  for  wood,     .     55 

commissioner  for  Boston, 115 

deceased,  petition  concerning  estate  of, .  273 
heirs  of.  plaintitTs  vs.  John  Coggan,     .  281 

Captain, 297 

Mr., 378 

T}'pe,  twenty  pounds  worth  to  be  procured  for 

the  Indian  college, 336 

Uncas, 299 

See  Narragansett. 

Underwood,  James, 190 

United  Colonies  of  New  England,  law  requir- 
ing customs,  &c.,  suspended,      ...     11 
proportion  of  e.xpenses  of  agent  at  London 

to  be  required  of, 18 

horses,  &c.,  to  be  impressed  for  use  of  com- 
missioners of, 18 

commissioners  authorized  to  appoint  time 

for  their  meetings, 19 

committee  appointed  to  frame  instruclions 

for  commissioners  of, 20,  44 

conunissioners   for,  granted   forty  pounds 

per  annum  for  e.xpenses, 41 

General  Court  approves  of  acts  of  commis- 
sioners of,  for  Massachusetts,      .     110,  111 
remonstrance  against  conduct  of  other  col- 
onies,   110,  111 

commissioners  of,  are  desired  to  continue 
in  Boston  till  return  of  messengers 
sent  to  the  Dutch  ;  desired  to  send  for 
commissioners    for   Connecticut    and 

New  Haven, 140 

answers  of  Court  to  questions  propounded 

by, 141 

controversy  concerning  powers  of  commis- 
sioners of,  especially  to  make  offen- 
sive war, 141 

declaration  of  the  General  Court  as  to  con- 
tinuance of  league, 144 

order  concerning  division  of  powder  of,      .  148 
declaration  of  the  General  Court  as  to  offen- 
sive war  sent  to  commissioners  of,  .     .165 

commissioners'  answer, 166 

replication,  rejoinder,  &c.,      .     .     .  167 — 173 
letters  sent  to  the  confederated  colonies  by 

the  General  Court, 173 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


509 


United    Colonies,  letter  sent  by  the  General 

Court  to  each  of, 196 

reunion  of;  articles    agreed  on  accepted 

by  the  General  Court  at  Hartford,  .     .  202 
secretary  to  entertain  commissioners  of,  at 

their  session, 303.  327 

commissioners  of,  to  place  a  share  of  ex- 
penses to  account  of  Indians,     .     .     .  324 

Upham,  (Jppam,  John, HT,  236 

Upshall,  Dorothy,  petition  of, 337 

Nicholas, 279,  337 

Usher,  Hezelciah, 21 

Valuation  of  estates  and  property  for  ta.xation, 

law  concerning, 288 

Venner,  Thomas, 69 

Verdict,  unusual,  in  Suffolk  County  Court,  or- 
der concerning, 145 

Vernon,  Francis,   two  hundred  acres  of  land 

granted  to, 355 

land  located  for, 399 

Vines,  Richard, 435 

Vintners,  see  Winesellers. 

Viol,  John, 283 

Virginia,  trade  with,  forbidden, 40 

Hopestill  Coney,  of  Boston,  sold  there,  to 

be  returned  to  Boston,  ....     428.  429 

Waddocke,  Henry, 162 

Wade,  Jonathan,  grant  of  four  hundred  acres 

of  land  to  be  located  for, 97 

Wadley,  Wadly,  John, 158 

selectman  at  Wells, 159 

Robert, IsS 

Waite,  Gamaliel, 312 

John, 70,236 

Richard, 191 

three  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,  332 

land  located  for, 353 

land  laid  out  for, 370 

to  be  paid  e.xtra,  &c., 403 

appointed  guard  for  the  Governor,      .     .  440 

,  marshal, 217 

Wake,  William,  petition  for  remission  of  fine,  .  192 

Wakefield,  John, 158 

Waldron,  Walderne,  Richard,     ....     189,  266 
deputy,  .     .     .  182,  255,  286,  321,  365,  416,  449 

associate  at  Dover  Court, 95,133 

e.xcused  from  attendance, 303 

e.xcused  from  further  attendance,      .     .     .  334 

Wales,  Nathaniel, 436 

Waley,  Nathaniel, 358 

Walgrave,  Mr., 376 

Walker,  Augustine,  deceased,  petition  of  ad- 

ministvators  of, 272 

Walker,  Prince, 395 

Richard, 9,  29,  146 

deputy. 2,  449 


Walker,  Captain, 112,117 

iVIr., 137 

Wall,  James, 271,  340 

John, 66 

petition    of,    concerning    case    against 
Henry  Groom,  executor  of   Nicliolas 

Groom,  deceased, 64 

and  Colcord's  case,  decision  in,    ....  350 
Wallis,  George,  answer  to  petition  of, .     .     .     .  302 

Walton,  Henry, 10 

Wampum,  legal  tender  under  forty  shillings, 

except  for  taxes, 36 

Ward,  Benjamin, 68 

Mr., 7 

Warden,  William, 158,  160 

Warner,  John,  petition  concerning  his  sentence 

of  banishment, 93 

Thomas, 164 

five  pounds  allowed  to, 251 

and  Richard  Hitchcock,  case  between,      .  245 

acknowledgment  of, 253 

Warwick, 14,  15,  350 

Watches,  constables',  time  of  setting  regulated,     83 
by  constables,  see  Constables. 
See  jMilitary  affairs. 

Waterman,  Richard, 332 

Watertown,  9,  75,  178,  183,  225,  350,  408,  409,  428 
deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,   120,    181,  221,  255,  286, 

320,  364,  416,  449 
and  Sudbury,  bounds  between,  to  be  laid 

out, 32 

and  Sudbury,  report  of  committee  settling 

bounds  between, 53,  54 

fine  remitted, 47 

and  Concord  boundaries  settled,  ....  54 
granted  two  thousand  acres  of  land,  ...  54 
special  committee  appointed  to  settle  the 

dispute  at, 187 

to  maintain  the  child  of  Mary  Davis,  .  .  262 
Hugh  Mason  to  solemnize  marriages  at,  .  339 
confirmation  of  Oldham's  land  to  Dummer 

by, 408 

Waterworks  Company  incorporated  in  Boston.     99 
Watton,  John,  deceased,  Brian  Pendleton  ad- 
ministrator of, 210 

Watts,  Henry, 358 

commissioner  for  Falmouth  and   Scarbor- 
ough Court. 360 

Way,  Eleazar,  vs.  Thomas  Purchase,  ....  334 

Weare,  Peter,  deputy, 449 

Webb,  Henry, 188,  331 

Samuel    Archard    and     others,    plaintiffs 

against. 374 

Webster,  John, ' 341,362 

special  magistrate  at  NorwotUick,     .     .     .  420 
Weekes.  Mr., 16 


510 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


Weights   and  measures,  decision   concerning 

choice  of  sealer, 134 

Weimouth,  Robert, 124 

Weld,  Daniel, 52 

schoojraaster,  two  hundred  acres  of  land 

granted  to, 397 

Captain    Joseph,    of   Roxbury,    deceased, 
order  confirming  sale  by  executors  of, 

to  Anthony  Stoddard, 51 

Marah, 52 

Sarah, 52 

Captain,  land  granted  to  children  of,     .     .  441 
Wells,   157,   160,   161,   163,   175,  201,  214,  233,  305, 

341,  374 

deputy  of, 182 

establishment  of   authority  of   Massacliu- 

selts  at, 158 

made  a  town,  &c., 15!) 

differences  in  the  church  at,  settled.  .  .160 
order  concerning  preaching  at,  ...  .  1G3 
expenses  of  commissioners  to,  paid,  .  .  .  180 
and  York,  committee  appointed  to  run  line 

between, 340 

and  York,  report  of  committee  on  line  be- 
tween,       373 

and  Cape  Porpus,  return  of  committee  on 

boundary  line  of, 425 

inhabitants  to  appear  at  York  Court, .  .  .  426 
church  at,  to  procure  a  new  minister,  &c.,  434 

Wells,  Mr., 187 

Wenham,  deputies  of,    .     .     .     .2,37,77,120,182 

Wentora,  Edward, 129 

West,  John,  commissioner  and   selectman   at 

Saco, 162,  163 

Thomas,  case  of,  referred  to  Salem  Court,  293 
Westland,  Richard,  land  granted  to.     ...     .  406 

Weymouth, 183,  383 

deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,  181,  221,  255,  286, 

321,  364,  416,  449 
William  Torrey  clerk  of  the  writs  at,  .  .  34 
order  concerning  a  whale  taken  at,  .  .  .  191 
acts  of  commissioners  for,  confirmed,     .     .  270 

fine  of  constable  abated, 299 

Whale  taken  at  Weymouth,  order  concerning 

division  of, 191 

Whale,  Philemon, 276 

Wharton,  Edward, 407,  421 

Wheat,  importation  of,  forbidden, 246 

Wheeler,  John, 32 

Joseph, 307 

Ensign,  and  Thomas  Hincksman  rewarded,  251 

licensed  fur  trader, 354 

and    Thomas    Hincksman,   reward    in- 
creased,   261 

Wheelocke,  Ralph,  deputy, 120 

Mr.,  appointed  to  marry  at  Medfield,     .     .  383 


Wheelwright,  Whelewright,  Thomas,      .     .     .129 
commissioner   and   selectman   at    Wells,   159, 

160 
Mr.,  conduct,  &c.,  approved  by  the  General 

Court, 187 

Wheelwright's  Creek, 266 

Whichcott,  Rebekah,  widow  of  Matthew  Crad- 

ock,  deceased,  petition  of,      ....     31 

Dr.,  and  wife,  petitioners, 297 

Whipple,  John, 263 

deputy, 2,  37,  77,  120 

Deacon, 249 

Whipsufferage,   Indian  plantation   established 

at, 363 

name  changed  to  Marlborough,     ....  424 

White,  John, 124,  158 

sale  of  land  to,  by  John  Hull  and  wife,  con- 
firmed,      190 

Nicholas, 232,  358 

answer  to  petition  of, 260 

Thomas,  deputy, 286 

Whiting,  John,  land  granted  to, 406 

land  located  for, 442 

Samuel,    of    Lynn,   overseer    of    Harvard 

College, 204 

Mr., 280 

Whitman,  John, .191 

Whitney,  John,  and  others,  petition  of,     .     .     .  228 

Whittacre,  Abraham, 374 

vs.  John  Godfrey, 408 

Wliittamore  House, 177 

Wica  Pauge, 353 

Wier,  Peter, 129 

Wife,  see  Husband  and  wife. 

Wight,  Henry,  to  be  paid  for  services,      .     .     .  354 

Wiggin,  Wiggins,  Wigging,   Captain  Thomas,  97, 

109,  122—131,  157,  188,  194,  200,  217,  245, 

247,  266,  267,  348,  360,  361. 

chosen  Assistant,  1,  36,  76,  119,  181,  221,  254, 

285,  320,  364,  416 
commissioner  for  Norfolk  Court,  ....  18 
to  keep  Norfolk  County  Courts,  ....  44 
to  hold  the  Court  at  Strawberry  Bank,   .     .     69 

land  granted  to, 75 

to  hold  Norfolk  County  Court, 94 

to  hold  the  Court  at  Dover, 95 

associate  for  York  County  Court,  .     .     .     .132 
petition   concerning  patent  of  Swampscot,  135 

land  granted  to, 147 

new  committee  appointed  to  lay  out  land 

to, 177 

associate  in  Norfolk  Court, 180 

land  laid  out  to, 211 

associate  in  York  County  Court,    ....  224 

to  hold  Norfolk  County  Court, 232 

land  granted  to, 240 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


511 


Wiggin,  Captain  Thomas,  his  portion  of  kind  at 

Quampsoott, 267 

surrender  by,  and  grant  of  land  to,   .     .     .  207 
apporiiti'd    associate    for     Yorkshirp    and 

Dover  Courts, 2fi8 

estate  of,  to  belong  to  Hampton,    ....  293 

commissioner, 338 

land  laid  ont  for, 377 

justice  of  Yorkshire  Court, 3S0 

to  keep  the  County  Court  at  Hampton,  .     .  406 

justice  of  Norfolk  Court, 425 

appointed  to  keep  Norfolk  County  Courts,  430 

Captain, 253,  277,  298 

Wilcott,  John, 215 

Wilcoks,  William, 73 

Wild,  William, 76 

Will,  original,  lost,  copy  of,  allowed,  &c.,     .     .118 

Willard,  Captain  Simon,  18,  32,  43,  54,  74,  98,  112. 

117,  134,  135,  137,  147,  148,  176,   187,   200, 

217,  228,  237,  245,  247.  249,  269,  275,  277, 

296,  302.  305,  313,  380,  409,  415,  428,  448. 

deputy,  .  ' 2,  37,  77,  120,  181 

Assistant,    .   181,  221,  254,  285,  320,  364,  416 

commissioner  at  Concord, 89 

and  Captain  Edward  Johnson,  commis- 
sioners to  survey  northern  boundary 

line, 98 

to  be  paid  for  services  in  finding  the 
northern  boundary  of  Massachusetts,  109 
Major,  commander  of  the  forces  against 

Ninnigret, 206 

recompen.sed  for   service  in  the  Narra- 

gansett  e.vpedition, 217 

licensed  to  sell   estate  of  Francis  Bar- 
ker, deceased, 253 

five  hundred  acres  of  land  granted  to,    .  304 

land  granted  to, 337 

and  others,  licensed  fur  traders,     .     .     .  354 

farm  located  for, 411 

William.s,  Arthur,  commissioner, 372 

George, 19*^ 

Nathaniel, 236,  436,  448 

Roger,  letter  to, 46 

Thomas, 162 

commissioner  and  selectman  at  Saco,   162,  163 
and    Joseph    Armitage,    case   between, 

referred, 318 

and  Joseph  Armitage,  case  between,      .  343 

Willis,  Michael, m 

Nicholas,  deceased, 18 

Willoughby,  Mr.  [Francis], 10,  21 

chosen  Assistant, 1,  36 

Wills,  probate  of,  in  Suffolk,  see  Estates. 

Wilson,  Go  wen, 124 

John,  one  thousand  acres  of  land  to  be  laid 

out  to,  381 


Wilson,  John,  Sen., 443 

land  to  be  laid  out  to, 402 

land  located  for, 442 

Wilson,  Joseph, 145 

Sarah, 24 

widow,  of  Braintree,  rs.  Thomas  Fa.von,   145 

Mr., 25 

Wincoll,  John, 124,  372 

deputy, 120,  182,  222,  320 

vs.  L.  Jones, 343 

Wine,  Treasurer  to  gather  duty  on,      ....     34 

committee  to  compound  for, 34 

and  liquors  to  be  sold  to  Indians  b}-  per- 
sons specially  licensed, 20] 

duty,    farmers  of,  discharged  from  agree- 
ment,   260 

farmers  of  duty  on,  allowed  abatement,     .  327 
duties,  committee  to   agree  vi'ith   Francis 

Norton  concerning, 423 

revenue  on,  to  be  farmed  out, Ill 

granted  to  Captain  William  Hawthorne,    .111 

impost  of,  settled, 323 

and  liquors,  law  concerning  sale  of,  .     .     .  324 
constables  to  aid  in  collection  of  duty,  .     .  325 
Winesellers,   petition    to    advance   prices   re- 
fused,  90 

Winnapuscakit  Lake, 109 

Winnisimniet  and  Reading  highway,  ....     92 
and   Reading  highway,  report  of  commit- 
tee,       176 

Winnuequassum,  an  Indian,  allowed  to  bring 
an  action  to  recover  Thomson's  Is- 
land,     209 

AVinsly,  Winsley,  Samuel,  96,   118,   134,   157,   175, 

177,  178,  194,  249 

deputy, 120 

petition  concerning  forfeited  bond,    ...     55 
on  committee  to  lay  out  the  west  end  of 

Hampten  bounds, 118,  134 

Winslow,  Edward,  agent  for  the  country,      .     .     18 
agent,  &c.,  debts  of,  to  be  paid  by  Treas- 
urer,     20,  21 

letter  from,  to  be  answered,      .     .   72,  196,  197 
Winslow,  Winslowe,  Josiah,  17,  217—220,  241,  252, 

294 

Samuel, 73,  97,  247 

and   others,    commissioners   to   lay  out 

Hampton  line, 50 

iMr.,  requested  to  pay  Mr.  Pococke,  ...     75 

Winter  Harbor, 435 

Winthrop,  Adam, 9,95,118 

owner  of  Governor's  Island, 116 

order  for  guardianship,  &c.,  of,      .     .     .     .116 
Henry  Dunster,  feoffee  in  trust  for,  .     .     .118 

Deane, 148,  232 

petitioner  for  establishment  of  Groton,  .  235 


512 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


Winthrop,  Deane,  appointed  selectman,  .  .  .  235 
one  thousand  acres  of  land  granted  to,  .  282 
committee  appointed  to  locate  land  for, .  338 

land  located  for, 357,  399 

Elizabeth, 148 

petition  of,   concerning   the   Governor's 

Island, 116 

John,     deceased,     two     hundred     pounds 
granted   to  Joshua,  son  of,  to   be  re- 

coriled, 35 

grant  to  child  of,  renewed, 116 

commissioners  appointed  to  lay  out  the 

farm  granted  to, 117 

John,  forty  pounds  granted  to.  for  services 

in  England, 65 

patent  granted  to,  for  making  salt,      ,     .  259 
Joshua,  two  hundred  pounds  granted  to,    .     35 

Samuel,  petition  of, 232 

Stephen, 1-18 

committee  appointed  in  behalf  oi,      .     .       9 
bounds  of  the  Ponds  farm  belonging  to,     95 

Mr., 444 

committee   appointed   to   lay   out   land 

for, 404 

Mrs.,  to  be  allowed  eight  per  cent,  on  the 

two  hundred  pounds  granted  to  herson,     44 

Winthrop's  Plain, 138 

Wiswall,Wisewall,  John,  33,  98,  201,  202,  216,  436, 

446,  448 

John,  deputy, 181,255,320 

administrator,  deed  to  Roger  Clapp,  .     .  445 
Thomas,  and  John  Jackson,  petition  of,      .  228 

Deacon, 218 

Witchcraft, 47,  96,  269 

Court  convened  for   trial  of  persons  ac- 
cused of, 73 

Withers,  Thoma.s 124 

associate  in  the  County  Court  ^or  Kittery, .  127 

deputy, 255 

Witherden,  John, 68 

vs.  William  Aspinwall, 66 

Witt,  John, 235 

Witten,  Michael, 358 

Woburn, 96,  183,  382,  408 

deputies  of,  2,  37,  77,  120,   182,  222,  255,  286, 

321,  365,  417,  449 
petition  of,  concerning  locating  farms  of 

Winthrop  and  Dudley, 117 

and  Concord;  inhabitants  of,  petition  for  a 

new  settlement  on  Merrimac  River,   .  136 
Captain    Edward  Johnson   authorized    to 

marry  at, 188 

dilTerences  at,  concerning  land  titles  re- 
ferred anew  to  committee,      ....  373 
Wolves,  &c.,  bounty  of  1648  revived,.     .     .     .  153 
Wood,  order  concerning  measuring  of,     .     .     .  222 


Woodbridge,  John, 178 

Woodcock,  JNIr., 215 

Woodtly,  Woodde,  Woodey,  John,   .     9,  66,  98,  396 
deceased,  petition  of  Coggan  and   Parks. 

executors,  concerning  estate  of. .     .     .  133 
order  relating  to  estate  of,      ....        318 

Mary, 66 

executri.x  of  will  of  John  Woodey,  de- 
ceased,           9 

petition  of,  concerning  dower,  ....     98 
order  concerning  estate  of  her  late  hus- 
band,  112 

Richard,  Sen., 133.  313 

Richard, 318 

secretary,  appointed  to  sue  for  balance 

due,  " 294 

action  against,  in  behalf  of  the  colony,  .  312 
claim  by  mortgage  on   house  of   Mrs. 

Coggan, 378 

Woodhouse.  Richard, 312 

Woodman,  Edward, 248,  425 

deputy, 364,  416 

commissioner  at  Newbury, 14 

appointed  to  marry  at  Newbury,   ....  382 
and  others,  of  Newbury,  plantation  granted 

to,  on  Saco  River, 402 

land  granted  to, 440 

Mr., 247,  249 

Woodman's  bridge, !  139 

Wood,s,  Wood,  Nicholas, 409,  441 

Wool,  order  concerning  washing  and  putting 

up, 121 

encouragement  to  raise, 198 

Woolcott,  Henry,  of  Windsor,  answer  to  peti- 
tion of, 232 

Women,  law  entitled,  repealed, 26 

Worcester,  William, 208,  229,  430 

proposal  by,  to  hold  religious  services  at 

Salisbury, 378 

Rev.  Mr.,  petitioner  in  behalf  of   Robert 

Pike, 313 

of  Salisbury, 393,  394 

order  concerning  salary  of, 427 

Wormell,  Joseph, 99 

Wormestall,  Arthur, 163 

Worship,   public,   no   person    to   conduct    by- 
preaching  without  license  by  elders 
of  neighboring  churches,  &c.,    .     .     .  122 
provision  for  maintenance  of  ministers,     .  199 
See  Preaching. 
Wotapuntum,  charges  of,  to  be  paid  by  Ninni- 

crot. 95 

Yale,  David, 112 

Yeoman.s,  Edmund, 33 

Susanna, 33 

Yeow,  Thomas, 99 


GENEEAL    INDEX. 


513 


York,  county  of, 161,338 

in  Maine,  established, 124 

boundaries  of  towns  in,  confirmed,  .     .     .  125 

Courts  established  in, 125,  129 

accounts  for  imposts,  &c.,  to  be  settled  by 

Nicholas  Shapleigh, 126 

inhabitants  of,  authorized  to  choose  three 

associates  for  their  courts,      .     .     .     .132 

Saco  to  be  a  part  of, 162 

Cape  Porpus  to  belong  to, 164 

to  bear  a  proportion  of  expense  of  commis- 
sioners sent  to, 165 

order  concerning  a  Court  in  the  county  of,  189 
to  contribute  towards  salaries  of  magis- 
trates,        204 

prison  to  be  built  in, 214 

commission  granted  for  holding  Court  at,  .  224 
commissioners  to  keep  Courts  at,  author- 
ized to  settle  affairs  at  their  discretion,  298 
to  arrest  John  Bonython,  (Bonnighton,) .     .  298 

return  of  valuation  for,  &c., 233 

Captain  Nicholas  Shapleigh  appointed  to 

oversee  military  affairs,  arms,  &c.,  in,  273 
letter  to  Jocelyn,  &c.,  concerning  govern- 
ment in, 306 

commissioners  appointed  to  extend  gov- 
ernment to  northern  and  eastern  limits.  338 
VOL.    IV. PAKT  I.  65 


petition  of,  sent  to  Lord   Protector  Crom- 
well,     306 

order  concerning, 350 

Commissioners'  Courts  in,  &c.,  granted  ex- 
tra powers, 359 — 361 

Courts,  order  concerning, 405 

York,  town  of,  .     .     .      214,  233,  305,  312,  341,  425 

deputies  of,     .  120,  182,  222,  255,  321,  417,  449 

formerly  Agamenticus, 128 

Court  established  at,  &c., 129 

Edward  Godfrey's  complaint  against,  re- 
ferred to  commissioners, 208 

and  Mr.  Godfrey,  commissioners  continued 

to  settle  difference  between,  ....  229 

and  Kittery,  report  of  committee  on  line 

between, 261 

and  Wells,  committee   appointed   to  run 

lino  between, 340 

deputy  for,  to  publish  proclamation  against 

Mr.  Boniton, 345 

and  Wells,  report  of  committee  on  line  be- 
tween,      373 

Young,  Rowland, 129 

Thomas,  vs.  Captain  Standfast,  order  con- 
cerning trial, 21 

Youths,  idleness  and  dissipation  discouraged 

among, 59 


INDEX    OF    FREEMEN. 


1650-1660 


INDEX  OF  FREEMEN. 

1650—1660. 


Addams,  Edward,  460,  461. 
Addams,  Joseph,  460. 
Addams,  Peter,  459. 
Addington,  Isaac,  459. 
Atwood,  William,  460. 
Baldwine,  Henry,  460. 
Bale,  Nathaniel,  459. 
Ball,  John,  459. 
Barrat,  Humphrey,  461. 
Basse,  Thomas,  461. 
Battle,  Thomas,  460. 
Beales,  Jeremiah,  461. 
Beers,  Anthony,  461. 
Billing,  John,  461. 
Blake,  James,  460. 
Blake,  William,  459. 
Bloget,  Daniel,  460. 
Bordman,  William,  460. 
Boulter,  Richard,  460,  461. 
Bradstreet,  Mr.  Samuel,  461. 
Brand,  George,  459. 
Brewar,  Thomas,  460. 
Brooke,  Caleb,  460. 
Brooke,  Joshua,  460. 
Brookes,  John,  459. 
Broune,  Edmund,  459. 
Busby,  Abraham,  459. 
Butler,  Henry,  459. 
Chadvvioke,  John,  461. 
Champney,  Joseph,  460. 
Chard,  William,  460. 
Child,  Joseph,  460. 
Clap,  Nathaniel,  461. 


Clarke,  Hugh,  461. 
Clarke,  Joseph,  460,  461. 
Collier,  Moses,  460. 
Convers,  Josias,  459. 
Cooke,  Walter,  460,  461. 
Cotton,  Mr.  Seaborn,  461. 
Croune,  Colonel  William,  461. 
Dell,  George,  459. 
Dinsdale,  William,  461. 
Dinsdall,  Thomas,  461. 
Douglas,  Henry,  461. 
Drury,  Hugh,  460. 
Dussett,  John,  461. 
Dwight,  Thomas,  460. 
Dwight,  Timothy,  461. 
Eaton,  Jonas,  460,  461. 
Eaton,  William,  460,  461. 
Edmonds,  Joshua,  459. 
Eliott,  Jacob,  460. 
Elliott,  John,  461. 
Emans,  Thomas,  460. 
Fasell,  John,  460. 
Fa.Kon,  Thomas,  461. 
Fering,  John,  460. 
Foored,  Andrew,  460. 
Foster,  Samuel,  459. 
Freary,  John,  461. 
French,  Jacob,  460. 
Fry,  George,  459. 
Gardiner,  Richard,  460. 
Garey,  William,  460. 
Gates,  Stephen,  461. 
Glover,  Habakkuk,  459. 


Glover,  Nathaniel,  460. 
Greene,  Jacob,  459. 
Greene,  John,  460. 
Grifl'yn,  Richard,  461. 
Griggs,  Joseph,  460,  461. 
Grise,  Charles,  459. 
Guppee,  John,  460,  461. 
Hamlett,  William,  459. 
Hanford,  Thomas,  459. 
Harri.s,  Robert,  459. 
Haugh,  Mr.  Samuel,  459. 
Heath,  Isaac,  460. 
Heath,  Peleg,  460. 
Herring,  Thomas,  460. 
Hewen,  Jacob,  461. 
Hilton,  William,  460,  461. 
Hinksman,  Thomas,  460. 
Hobart,  see  Hubbard. 
Houlden,  Justinian,  461. 
How,  Joseph,  461. 
Howard,  Robert,  460. 
Hubbard,  Jeremiah,  460,  461. 
Hubbard,  Joshua,  460,  461. 
Hubbard,  Josiah,  461. 
Hubbard,  Mr.  William,  460,  461 
Humphry,  Jonas,  460,  461. 
Hunt,  Samuel,  460. 
Hurryman,  Leonard,  461. 
Ireland,  William,  459. 
Jackewish,  Abraham,  461. 
Johnson.  Solomon,  459. 
Johnson,  William,  461. 
Jones,  Jack,  460. 
(517) 


518 


INDEX   OF   FllEEMEN. 


Jones,  John,  459. 
Kent,  John,  460. 
Kingsly,  Samuel,  459. 
Knight,  Joseph,  460. 
Knight,  Michael,  460. 
Knoules,  Mr.  John,  459. 
Lane,  Job,  461. 
Lane,  William,  461. 
Lindon,  Augustin,  461. 
Majes,  John,  461. 
Majes,  Samuel,  461. 
Marble,  William,  460. 
Marrion,  John,  460. 
Marsh,  Alexander,  460. 
Marsh,  Thomas,  460. 
Marshall,  Thomas,  460,  461. 
Martin,  Solomon,  460. 
Martin,  William,  460,  461. 
Mason,  Henry,  459. 
Mattocke,  David,  459. 
Medcalf,  Thomas,  460,  461. 
Mirriam,  Joseph,  459. 
Moore,  Francis,  460. 
Morse,  John,  460. 
Mousell,  John,  459. 
Newell,  Abraham,  460,  461. 

Norcross, ,  460. 

Norcrosse,  Richard,  460. 
Nutting,  John,  461. 
Ouldam,  Richard,  459. 
Owen,  William,  459. 
Paine,  Stephen,  460,  461. 
Paine,  William,  459. 
Pannly,  Alexander,  461. 


Park,  Jacob,  461. 
Parker,  John,  459,  460. 
Parmiter,  Robert,  459. 
Palridge,  William,  460,  461 
Pearse,  Robert,  459. 
Peii-point,  John,  560. 
Porter,  Richard,  460,  461. 
Pratt,  William,  459. 
Prentice,  Henry,  459. 
Prentice,  Thomas,  460. 
Rand,  Thomas,  461. 
Read,  Philip,  461. 
Read,  Thomas,  461. 
Reade,  William.  460,  461. 
Rice,  Matthew,  461. 
Rice,  Thomas,  461. 
Richards,  James,  460. 
Ripley,  Abraham,  461. 
Ripley,  John,  461. 
Rise,  Edward,  459. 
Rocke,  Joseph,  460. 
Rugles,  John,  460. 
Sanforth,  Robert,  460. 
Sannders,  John,  459. 
Saunders,  Martin,  459. 
Sawen,  John,  460. 
Sawer,  Thomas,  460. 
Shepheard,  John,  459. 
Skinner,  Thomas,  460,  461. 
Smith,  James,  460. 
Smith,  John,  460. 
Souther,  Nathaniel,  460. 
Sprage,  John,  4fi0,  461. 
Spring,  Henry,  461. 


Steevens,  Henry,  460. 
Straiten,  Samuel,  460,  461. 
Stone,  Samuel,  461. 
Stone,  Simon,  460,  461. 
Stowe,  Thomas,  460,  461. 
Slower,  Richard,  459. 
Sumer,  George,  461. 
Sumner,  Roger,  461. 
Taylor,  John,  459. 
Thomas,  Hugh,  459. 
Thompson,  John,  460,  461. 
Thompson,  Mr.  WiUiam,  461. 
Tinker,  John,  460. 
Underwood,  William,  459. 
Upham,  Nathaniel,  460,  461. 
'Walsby,  David,  459. 
Walk  ins,  Thomas,  461. 
Way,  Aaron,  459. 
Weekes,  Amiell,  461. 
Welch,  Tliomas,  459. 
Weld,  John,  459. 
Weld,  Thomas,  460. 
Weyman,  Francis,  461. 
Wheeler,  William,  461. 
AVhiting,  Mr.  Samuel,  461. 
Whitman,  Thomas,  460,  461. 
Whitmore,  Frank,  460. 
Whitney,  Richard,  459. 
Whitton,  James,  461. 
Wight,  John,  460,  461. 
Williams,  Nicholas,  460. 
Williams,  Samuel,  459. 
Wisewall,  Thomas,  460. 
Wooddeys,  Henry,  461. 


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